Example sentences of "which [vb past] [adv] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Saunders has a cloud over him with the possibility of legal action by Paul Elliott over a tackle which ruled out the Chelsea defender for the season .
2 Koch decided that no exchange could be located within 1,000 feet of a school , which ruled out the possibility of a communitybased programme .
3 Six Senior Clerks were each in charge of the Consular , the Slave Trade and four political departments , which divided up the world between them into convenient geographical areas .
4 There was a cabinet on the pavement beside the traction pole , in front of Holy Trinity Church , with a cable emerging from a hole in the top , which passed over a pulley near the top of the post and worked the overhead point , in conjunction with the rail point .
5 York 's fly half Andy Brown provided a cracking start , succeeding with two out of three penalties in the first eight minutes , Novos ' Richard Calman reducing the arrears with a hotly disputed penalty which passed nearly a yard wide of the target .
6 It was wild countryside , steep hills and grassy plateaux , scarred and gashed by steel-grey rocks and rapid , frothing rivers which tumbled down the hillside .
7 They took an alley which doubled back the way they had come and then they branched off it .
8 It may also have been the political considerations involved which led both the WJEC and the University of Wales to remain silent throughout the argument .
9 Mark said that when the Raja saw the damage he was wearing glasses ‘ which steamed up a bit . ’
10 The SLORC issued a statement on July 27 which laid down the powers and responsibilities of the newly elected People 's Assembly , but gave no indication as to when it would be allowed to convene .
11 Bills seeking to exclude various categories of placemen from Parliament were introduced on average once every session between 1692 and 1714 , and a general measure banning all placemen from the Commons found its way into the Act of Settlement of 1701 ( which laid down the conditions on which the Hanoverians would succeed to the throne ) , although this provision was subsequently modified before the Act came into effect .
12 L 20 , p. 19 ) , which laid down the principle of equal access to fishing grounds ; ( b ) the thirtieth recital in the Preamble to Council Regulation ( E.E.C. ) No. 3796/81 on the common organisation of the market in fishery products ( Official Journal 1981 No .
13 The Labour Party had Ramsay MacDonald 's voice and presence , the loyalty of much of the bunkered working class , and a manifesto which avoided both the advantages and disadvantages of precision .
14 The club , which met weekly every Wednesday evening throughout the Parliamentary session ( usually at the Bell Tavern , Westminster ) , was composed of about 150 Tory backbenchers , and its main aim was to function as a pressure group to urge a more Tory policy on the Harley ministry .
15 They were part of the Cicero Club , a society which met once a month or so to discuss famous unsolved mysteries .
16 There was a card club which met once a week in winter , where Green played with a group of about a dozen , including his doctor , Richard Scambler , and James Fleming of Grasmere and the Partridges , Robert and Edward .
17 He had become involved in the administration of St Anne 's House in Soho , for example ; it had been opened this year as a " centre of Christian discourse " , and in the autumn he and Philip Mairet conducted a discussion group , " Toward the Definition of Culture " which met once a week until the middle of December .
18 She might consider joining Ellie Niven 's women 's group which met once a week to promote the interests of their sex .
19 The long , regimented day , six of which made up a working week , obviously constrained the recreational possibilities for factory workers .
20 The main classes of vessel which made up a fleet were first-class armoured ships ( which were to hand out and absorb the punishment of a pitched battle ) , other ironclads used for cruising , coast-defence and the many functions of the old sail frigates , and the ‘ flotilla ’ of smaller ships , of which the commonest were gunboats and the newest , torpedo-boats .
21 She and Allan has , so far as the plot goes , the look of an afterthought , with a patchwork plot full of echoes of Quatermain 's other adventures and placing Ayesha in the same kind of danger from rebellion and rivalry which made up the story lines of She and Ayesha .
22 The same went for the glass underfoot ; another half-metre of water lay underneath the transparent slabs which made up the floor , gurgling under the scratched surface and around the slaty pedestals supporting the columns above .
23 The aim of the second Columbus video was to address the main issues raised by staff following the video and briefings which made up the March cascade .
24 Markovic said that the country 's fortunes now rested largely on the conduct of the various republics and autonomous regions which made up the federation .
25 But the appalling Carl Douglas and Rubettes are just as potent salvagers of memory as Mike Oldfield and the Pink Floyd , because theirs was the music of harrowing , lust-ridden parties and halitotic discos ; theirs was the music which made up the soundtrack of the most exciting moments of our lives .
26 Many of the elements which made up the relocation package applied equally to eligible staff moving from Kent and north London , for example , the payment of removal expenses , disturbance allowance and house expenses .
27 With the relaxed detachment of a man who has an implicit trust in his technology , Vologsky cast his eyes over the bewildering array of instruments which made up the control panel , taking note of the few facts he actually needed to know .
28 How then did the south-western French domains of the Plantagenets rank in the hierarchy of fiefs which made up the kingdom of France ?
29 We did n't see any whales , sharks , or polar bears underwater , but I became fascinated by the cast of characters which made up the food chain in these waters .
30 The blocking was all the various moves which made up the pattern of each scene .
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