Example sentences of "in which [noun pl] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Sociological explanations of the same condition draw attention to the hospital environment in which mothers have their babies , and to the debilitating effects of medical procedures and technology during labour and delivery .
2 The evening will usually develop into an informal session of communal singing in which groups contribute their own original ( and adapted ) poetry and song about their own struggles etc .
3 The firm had suspended its head of research Terry Smith , issued injunctions against him and his publishers , and gained , for what is essentially an analysis of the ways in which companies improve their reported profits , the sort of press coverage more usually associated with revelations about Princess Di .
4 The name Leconfield derives from Llecen-Fylliad , meaning ‘ the flat stone in the gloomy shade ’ , and its enclosed area was the sacred theatre in which rites of initiation into druidical mysteries were solemnized and in which aspirants performed their probationary noviciates .
5 The way in which firms form their expectations of their rivals ' choices .
6 There is a further aspect of financial management to consider at this stage : the impact of different legal structures on the way in which firms manage their financial affairs .
7 The House of Commons Select Committee on Education found that although the Act had enhanced the position of parents in many respects , there were ‘ still situations in which parents feel their contribution … to be insufficient or ineffective ’ .
8 2 Write a story in which parents treat you in a way that you believe to be unfair .
9 There was a never-ending pile of sewing in her huge , wicker sewing basket , which was of the kind in which snake-charmers keep their snakes .
10 They grumble that the company 's membership of the British Franchise Association gave it a ring of confidence in which investors put their faith .
11 A succession of rescheduling deals , known by the places — Toronto , Trinidad — in which creditors dreamt them up , have been proposed in recent years .
12 Douglas McGregor , in his book The Human Side of Enterprise , discussed the way in which managers see themselves in relation to others .
13 Turning now to the ways in which microphones generate their signals , the cheapest types use a crystal , but their quality is poor and they are not recommended for video .
14 In 1973 the City of London Polytechnic obtained CNAA approval for its modular degree , beginning with fifteen subjects and a first year in which students reappraised their objectives and had guidance and counselling available .
15 A common example is the situation in which students find themselves being asked questions on topics that have not been taught .
16 The second kind of moral value involved in the justification of different ways in which persons mould their moral world is the value of forming and pursuing projects that give shape and content to one 's life .
17 But those are ceremonial events in which citizens reaffirm their surrender of sovereignty and their carelessness of their personal autonomy .
18 One important part of the citizens charter is not so much that it contains many individual ideas and proposals for change , but that it is intended to change the entire attitude of public servants and the way in which citizens approach them .
19 The manner in which coroners perform their official duties varies widely .
20 Yet there is also a less determinate area , in which artists devoted themselves to religious art not only , and sometimes not primarily , because this was the willed commission of their Immediate patron , but because they could identify themselves with the religious purpose of which the immediate social organization was the available manifest form .
21 The problem in this area arises because of the advanced booking process in which customers commit their money or some part of it well in advance of actually taking their holiday and without ‘ seeing ’ the service offered .
22 The current traditional system of approving individual courses is clearly inadequate : it neither takes into account the way in which institutions manage their total resources , nor allows a rapid response to fast changing circumstances .
23 Without having that understanding of what emotions are and what they are doing to us we can not analyse the way in which emotions disturb our balance and what that should teach us about ourselves and our relationship with the world .
24 What it must now do is issue some clear guidelines on the manner in which doctors involve themselves — directly or indirectly — in promoting unproved remedies to the general public .
25 The answer to these questions lies in the political-economic context in which land-users find themselves .
26 Scottish teachers , like their counterparts south of the border , were seeking better pay and conditions ; but the Scottish dispute was also a massive protest at the rapid rate of educational change and at the way in which teachers felt they were expected to carry forward developments without adequate support .
27 If this diversity in ethos cuts across any diversity in the objective conditions in which teachers find themselves , as it seems to , then there is reason to doubt the idea that decline in these conditions is the cause of teacher demoralization .
28 If we can get a clear idea about the situation in which teachers find themselves at present , and how they experience it , then we shall be in a better position to see what the most productive way forward is .
29 First we need to review the national predicament in which teachers find themselves .
30 The repertoire of transactions in which teachers engage their pupils when teaching X depends , among other things , on the nature of X and on the mental picture of the pupils ' developmental path held by the teacher ; the teaching will presumably be , in the teacher s eyes , consistent with these factors and at some levels , demonstratively effective .
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