Example sentences of "which [pers pn] [adv] [vb base] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 … thank you for the journal which I always enjoy reading .
2 This seems a useful technique for any situation where a straight piece of wood ends in a curve , since it maintains the visual integrity of the piece and is considerably easier than laminating a number of separate strips ( which I always find slide out of line while being clamped ) .
3 Well there 's been some scepticism about the symbolism of , of weddings there 's also some scepticism about the reality of making that vow forever , er , which I personally have sympathy with cos I do n't see how you can say you 're going to do anything forever , but I suppose if you 've made a vow you 've got to stick with it .
4 You can also ease initial strain on your cashflow by taking advantage of a two year ‘ capital repayment holiday ’ , during which you only pay interest on the loan and make no capital repayments .
5 Are there any areas of life in which you consistently deny responsibility ?
6 Why not , in the dog days of summer , use your time to prepare those gorgeous punchcard and mylar sheet designs which you never find time to do when the knitting season is in full swing later on .
7 Many of the programs currently available , and the majority of those being prepared for launch within the next few months , will run on perfectly ordinary business computers , the same systems on which you currently perform word processing or accounting .
8 We hope that although this is not the type of material to which we normally give space , ‘ MI ’ readers will find it a useful ‘ keep and file ’ reference during the months ahead .
9 Our contribution to the liberation of Kuwait ( and , during the 1980s , to the protection of the Falkland Islands ) ; our longer term contribution to the success of NATO and the collapse of the Warsaw Pact — these are matters in which we rightly take pride .
10 There is no point at which they unambiguously intersect experience and therefore no point where one of their contentions could be modified by behavioural data .
11 In the face of government determination to enforce the February 1911 laws more than eight thousand Aube growers marched through the streets of Bar-sur-Aube carrying on their backs paniers de mannequin ( grape harvesting baskets ) full of tax-forms which they ceremoniously set fire to .
12 The attitudinist will admit , indeed , that there is a weak sense of true' and ‘ false ’ , in which they merely register agreement or disagreement , and in which it is quite legitimate to use them to express agreement or disagreement in attitude with an ethical statement .
13 Thus one exalts facts , the other the imagination ; both conceal the extent to which they necessarily make use of the other 's procedures .
14 In all three of these novels the ‘ crimes ’ are those committed by basically good people who , through no real fault of their own ( other than the speculative instinct that is the mainstay of the capitalist system ) , have been caught up in bank failures for which they valiantly accept responsibility .
15 Underdogs Cambridge survived a desperate opening 13 minutes during which they never set foot in Oxford 's half .
16 Hence it should be no surprise that ordinary policemen and women come to feel that the police management and the government do not care that the risks associated with routine policing in a divided society are borne primarily by them : that the ordinary policeman and woman can be sacrificed for the sake of wider goals , the purpose of which they often have difficulty in comprehending .
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