Example sentences of "[Wh adv] [art] [noun sg] [vb -s] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 There is usually a formal system of discounts , for advertisers spending over a certain level with the station , and perhaps even for early booking , and whenever a station has time to sell which it fears it might fail to dispose of it is possible for the buyer to negotiate on the price .
2 A Christian authority on eastern religions , Patrick Sookhdeo said , ‘ I have seen that whenever a person uses yoga , he makes a shift from a monotheistic view of God , to a pantheistic view ( God identified with nature ) , and finally to a monistic view ( God as an impersonal IT , without form , personality and essence ) .
3 Hutcheon 1977 and Wagstaff 1984 ) , in the name of a radically different literary project , wherein the text draws attention not to the outside world , but to its own procedures .
4 Employee-led programmes , whereby the Institute reimburses tuition and professional membership costs , emerged as the principal tool of training and development .
5 Jaguar had felt itself to be protected from such a takeover by a golden share ( a mechanism whereby the government provides protection from takeover to recently privatised companies for a finite period of time ) .
6 We are continually recruiting gaming staff and we run our own training scheme whereby the recruit starts work as a slot cashier and if found to be suitable for casino work is then trained as a black-jack dealer .
7 The emphasis must be on total patient care , whereby the learner has responsibility for particular patients .
8 Rather than the benefit of trade debts being sold to Newco , a mechanism can be inserted in the business sale agreement whereby the vendor retains ownership of these and Newco collects them in as undisclosed agent for the vendor , so that there is no conveyance on sale of the debts for stamp duty purposes .
9 Specific browsing is applied to a more structured form of seeking library materials whereby a user makes use of a tool , such as a library catalogue or bibliography , to locate items on a specific topic .
10 Thus engineers should learn about how the public perceives risk and makes risk decisions .
11 This account shows how the company raises finance during the year and what the finance was used for .
12 However , this is not how the law sees accountability .
13 Thus although we do not know how the DNA controls development , we are reasonably sure that it does carry almost all the information which has been produced by selection , and which is needed to control development .
14 If we do n't understand the psychological processes that form the bases of performance on the tasks that we use in our behavioural studies our chances of understanding how the brain controls behaviour are limited .
15 Once you have understood how the machine creates slip , tuck and knit stitches , the rest is just a progression of these , involving very little more than using the electronic pattern selection .
16 Conversely , engineers should , where appropriate , inform the public about how the profession perceives risk and makes risk decisions .
17 How the network redirects file reads — The three main network operating systems , and how they work — Insecurity on the server — The Sniffer
18 Here , there are also formal links ( So , she , etc. ) but it is not clear how the sequence makes sense .
19 To understand the behaviour it is essential to consider the question of how a cat faces death .
20 To explain in detail how a user begins work on LIFESPAN .
21 ‘ The only things they can offer you is things like making grass grow on colliery spoil heaps or being a world expert on how a locust eats grass , ’ says Peter .
22 ‘ Tread pattern ’ means the raised and lowered pattern which , in modern tyres , is provided around the walls of the tyre to a small degree as well as where the tyre makes contact with the road surface .
23 Figure 7.5 Which of a pair of male sticklebacks wins in a territorial dispute depends on where the fight takes place , as a simple experiment by Niko Tinbergen demonstrates .
24 It can not operate to Alderney , where the Trislander remains king — and quite literally a life-line for the island to the outside world .
25 Leave some slack at the point where the cable enters slack at the point where the cable enters the floor or ceiling void , to allow it to be bedded in a recessed chase cut into the plaster at some future date .
26 In both these cases it was held that the alternative of a manslaughter verdict ought to be left to the jury where the occasion justifies action in self-defence , or to prevent a crime , or to apprehend an offender , but where the defendant acts beyond the necessity of that occasion .
27 4 Entry The right for the Tenant and all persons expressly or by implication authorised by the Tenant to enter upon other parts of the Centre and ( if any ) the Adjoining Property to carry out works to the Premises where such works would otherwise not be possible , or may be possible but rendered more expensive than they would otherwise be if this right was available The problem of access over a neighbour 's land has been greatly alleviated by the passage of the Access to Neighbouring Land Act 1992 which sets out a procedure whereby a person may obtain a court order permitting access to a neighbour 's property in order to carry out works to protect , repair or maintain their property in circumstances where the neighbour refuses consent to such access .
28 Indeed it might be unnecessarily time-consuming for students also to learn about the particular issues of the country where the course takes place .
29 The first , and simplest , is where the government has access to better information than the private sector ; the second is where consumers have better access than producers to information about current shocks .
30 The name is taken from the point on the chart where the total costs line crosses the sales revenue line ie at the point where neither a loss nor a profit is being made .
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