Example sentences of "which [verb] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Also , I have found Mr Hauser has a Lear jet which flies him across the world plus a Sikorsky helicopter which I saw taking off from the grounds of Livingstone Manor .
2 Last season , Dungannon won the Ulster League which qualified them for a ‘ round-robin ’ series with the other provincial winners in a bid to gain entry to the AIL .
3 Fortunately my mother was able to return to teaching and to complete the final two or three years which qualified her for a pension of her own .
4 In 1964 the TUC sold its 40 per cent of the Herald to the Mirror Group , which relaunched it as the Sun .
5 Among the liberal Russian press , Moskovskiye novosti of July 19 commented that " the SC has been given powers which raise it above the government " ; and Kommersant also compared the newly empowered SC to the former communist party politburo , because of its potential power , its secrecy and its non-accountability .
6 Carrying a heavy basket and bundle , Tess was walking towards the hills which divided her from the Vale , her place of birth .
7 The top is quickly reached from the grassy nick which separates it from the nearby Roaches .
8 A dress which enveloped her in an aura of purity .
9 I have time to discuss only one lexical myth : this is the signpost which points us in the direction of precision .
10 Hence the modern Oedipus complex is not wholly explicable by reference to the modern family ( and therefore not controvertible by reference to modern family arrangements which allegedly do not feature it ) , but rather to both the individual 's actual family circumstances , and to the inherited and culturally transmitted conditions of the species which produced it in the first place and which determined its particular expression .
11 What Housman has given us is a poem quite poignantly suggestive of that sense of private and personal loss that runs through so many of his lyrics ; a poem which refers us to the places and voices of The Other Shropshire , where the Graces go , and lads lie untimely in the earth .
12 Where a member of a board is not re-elected to the authority which appointed him at an ordinary election , he remains a board member until the first meeting of the authority after the election .
13 The label draws attention to three important developments which distinguish it from the early Romanov State .
14 Her condemnation of the home and family as the source of women 's subjection and inferiority , and her assertion that ‘ any woman who is really a rebel longs to destroy the conventions which bind her in the home as much as those which bind her in the state ’ , has a modern ring , although in practice her solution , like that of Florence Nightingale , amounted to a complete rejection of family life rather than a demand for its restructuring .
15 Her condemnation of the home and family as the source of women 's subjection and inferiority , and her assertion that ‘ any woman who is really a rebel longs to destroy the conventions which bind her in the home as much as those which bind her in the state ’ , has a modern ring , although in practice her solution , like that of Florence Nightingale , amounted to a complete rejection of family life rather than a demand for its restructuring .
16 It was nevertheless accepted for a number of years by the Trades Union Congress , which admitted it as an affiliated organisation until 1881 , when it was declared ineligible .
17 The ‘ primary rate ’ ISDN provides a block of a minimum of 30 lines , and is mostly used by large firms which connect it to a telephone switchboard .
18 First this is held downwards , then it is swung upwards to varying heights so that you have a split second in which to hit it with a suitable technique .
19 It was in Schiaparelli that she met Tricarico , who brought her aboard the Resplendent Trogon , which led her into the presence of Balthazar Plum — and if it had n't been for all that , she would never have acquired the Alice in the first place .
20 Skirting the lakeside , she took a route which led her in the opposite direction from him .
21 I skulked down one side of the garden and went through the arch which led me to a walled garden in the middle of which there was a fountain playing .
22 I checked my hexagram against the index , which led me to the pages headed Ta Kuo : Preponderance of the Great .
23 Although this is an isolated example it is typical of the problems I encountered and which led me to the conclusion that the product simply is n't ready for release into the market in its current form .
24 He was , and clearly remained to the last days of his long life , a fairly severe obsessional-rigid , indecisive , racked with doubts and unable to rid himself of a penchant for rather down-market women which led him into a series of miserable relationships .
25 Skirting the marshy end , they slowly climbed the gentle slope on the other side to join the carriage drive which led them to the stable .
26 In the 17 hours they were missing after losing their way , they trudged the forest to keep up their body heat until they eventually reached a path with white arrows which led them to the edge of the forest .
27 The court accepted that in certain circumstances information about prices could be invested with a sufficient degree of confidentiality to make that information a business secret or its equivalent but in the present case it found factors which led it to the conclusion that neither the information about the prices nor the sales information as a whole had the degree of confidentiality necessary to support the plaintiff 's claim .
28 The cave itself was surprisingly warm and we realised we were walking through a gallery which led us into a lofty underground cavern .
29 We walked the long , covered-in wooden bridge which led us over the Hundred Foot River to the members ' observatory .
30 Other voluntary hospitals with such funds lost them to the Exchequer , which pooled them in a central fund .
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