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

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1 There 's talk of hiring special transport and shutting down most of the offices for the morning or the afternoon , whenever the funeral happens to be . ’
2 Moreover , the system of land tenure , wherein the land belongs to the indigenous Fijians and can only be leased to Indo-Fijians ( the descendants of indentured cane workers who were drafted in from India in the early colonial period ) militates against conservation measures because it ensures the political dominance of the former ; and the encouragement of production ensures that such land is seen to be in use , an artefact to maintain internal stability .
3 The bill , after being passed by the Lords , receives the royal assent , a mere formality , whereby the monarch accedes to the bill .
4 Another potential problem for Marlow is how the public reacts to the idea of Quorn .
5 How the bureaucracy relates to the ruling class is more than a matter of origins .
6 In step three , the facilitator asks people to personalize the trigger , to see how the problem relates to Our lives .
7 Yet this is precisely how the problem tends to be approached by official bodies .
8 God knows how the treasury comes to be so desperate poor .
9 It is in this layer that historians will discover answers to their key questions : how the firm responds to opportunities and threats ; how it interacts with government , other firms , its employees , and its customers ; how it establishes R&D programs and marketing strategies ; and so on .
10 The individual 's interpretation of a situation is based on personal beliefs about communication competence — one 's own and the other person 's — and these beliefs affect how the individual relates to others , and how others relate to the individual .
11 So after ten years of telling us how the future belongs to Thatcher , he will spend the next five telling us how successful Major will be in creating a classless society .
12 I asked him to explain how the Area relates to the rest of the University .
13 In this chapter , we examine the factors which influence the demand for money and the important question of how the economy reacts to changes in the supply of money .
14 At the John Radcliffe Hospital , Professor Andrew McMichael 's looking at how the body responds to the virus .
15 So our care and management of the young horse will affect not only how the horse relates to people , but whether the horse relates to its environment in a way that is constructive or destructive to the horse itself .
16 How the glass seems to be bringing together so many of my old themes , he wrote .
17 This letter written to the Daily Jang , an established Urdu newspaper printed in Britain , shows how the family responds to a man 's promiscuity .
18 Physics is interested only in those abstracted features of the world which its theories specify : one way of describing what physics does is " go beneath " how the world appears to us to uncover the " real " physical principles and processes which produce the ordered universe .
19 Well the headmaster of this school where the kid goes to is gon na see her mum this morning so can give her the message .
20 Erm you already pointed out some of the important points where the gradient gets to zero .
21 The way forward needs better detailed understanding of the ‘ sticking ’ — the unwanted occasions where the muon attaches to the produced helium instead of initiating further fusions .
22 ‘ There are some cases where the link appears to be quite close .
23 In gardens where the soil tends to be dry , they will do best in shade .
24 An example of this is where the transaction relates to shares in a company and the firm is a financial adviser to the company , or the firm is advising someone who is contemplating a substantial acquisition of shares in the company .
25 The question for the court in any case where the discretion falls to be exercised , one or other of the gateways provided by article 13 having been opened , is whether or not the child or children should be returned to the jurisdiction from which they have been wrongfully removed .
26 The second type of case deals with situations where the legislation refers to sums being paid directly or indirectly to a particular person ( for example , see TA 1988 , s677 — although the expression was subsequently extended by what is now s677(10) ) .
27 ( a ) Where the judge comes to the conclusion that the prosecution evidence , taken at its highest , is such that a jury properly directed could not properly convict upon it , it is his duty , upon a submission being made , to stop the case .
28 In juvenile courts offenders may not be identified ; the public and press may be excluded from Official Secrets Act trials where the evidence relates to national security secrets , and the testimony given at committal proceedings usually can not be published until the trial is over , to avoid prejudicing the jury .
29 This can be diagrammed in the following way for the early interception : and as follows for the final one : The to infinitive , therefore , is not strictly speaking a verb but rather a syntactic construction : it involves two parts , the infinitive , a verbal form which evokes a representation of an event produced by means of the verb system , and to , a preposition which indicates a relationship between the place in time where the support has to be situated to begin actualizing the infinitive 's event ( occupied by the representation of non-ordinalized person incorporated within the infinitive ) and some other prior place in time which the support is also represented as occupying or having occupied previous to the realization of this event .
30 It is clear that in cases where the mistake relates to a circumstance qualified by mens rea the outcome will be the same whether one adopts the definitional or the defence doctrine of mistake , that is ‘ the prosecution will wither on the bough .
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