Example sentences of "which [vb base] [prep] [art] [num] " in BNC.

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1 Through its lexical meaning of a movement from point A to point B , to allows one to represent two positions of the infinitive event 's spatial support in time — one before , and one at the beginning of the infinitive 's event — which correspond to the two representations of person — extra- and intra-infinitival — involved in any use of the infinitive .
2 Nichols ( 1969 , p. 12 ) views PPB as following five processes which accord to the three elements outlined in the previous paragraph .
3 In his study of the problems of implementing the Local Government Act 1972 in England and Wales , Richards describes the various means that ‘ exist to facilitate county/district co-operation , some of which depend on the 1972 Act and some of which do not ’ ( Richards 1975b:76 ) .
4 Ermine negligées ; bath in milk , numerous underpanties , chemises and other intimate items , all of which look like a million dollars on the svelte Ralston figure , just round enough . ’
5 He then gives four ‘ growth developing capacities ’ of education which overlap with the four ways in which Denison suggests education increases labour productivity .
6 F and R produce cycles of corners and edges which overlap in the three positions along the FR edge of the cube .
7 Further , do the series of cultural negotiations which emerge from the two texts produce a larger ‘ cultural text ’ as a result of this exchange ?
8 Small desert rodents and the Bedouin goat can survive short periods of dehydration which result in a 20–30 per cent weight loss .
9 The scheme involves replacing buildings , some of which date to the 1930s .
10 The connections between pins 4 and 6 and the battery negative line keep the unused inputs which exist on the 4013 at Logic O and prevent false operation .
11 The Australian desert , for example , is structurally an ancient worn-down plateau of crystalline and ancient sedimentary rocks , the more resistant of which rise to a thousand metres or more ( a few thousand feet ) above the general surface level .
12 R. F. V. Heuston summarises this by saying that there is a distinction between the rules which govern on the one hand the composition and the procedure and , on the other hand , the area of power , of a sovereign legislature .
13 Since these particular constraints do not apparently operate upon variation in subject-verb agreement in standard English , which in turn is affected by a different set of constraints ( see Huddleston 1984 : 241 ) , we must assume that the surface variants of the verb which occur in the two dialects are embedded in structurally different grammars .
14 Naturally , if one goes farther back in time the evidence becomes more shaky , but nevertheless there apparently were reversals in late Permian and late Cretaceous times which coincide with the two most important extinction levels .
15 At 354 grams , it compares favourably with its competitors which lurch towards the 400 mark .
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