Example sentences of "which [vb -s] [pers pn] all " in BNC.

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1 The reality of what was happening to John either played on people 's own experience of terrible loss and final separation , or the fear of it , which haunts us all .
2 ‘ I do n't think Longfield has a problem this is something which confronts us all .
3 By looking at these developing years and investigating the transformations which take place you are entering new territories which begin to examine in earnest the role of the media and the effects stereotyping which influences us all .
4 There may be a notice board which has them all written down , so that residents and staff can see at a glance what 's on today .
5 It 's the sneak preview magazine article , the trailer , the review , the comic/book/T-shirt/toy of the film , the TV special about the making of the film , the spin-off series , the re-edited video release and finally the sequel , which starts it all off again .
6 The Wilde apocrypha contains a joke which says it all — or a fair part of it .
7 ‘ We are actually now dealing with a substance which affects us all , not just the few people who take cannabis for recreational purposes . ’
8 ‘ We are dealing with a substance which affects us all , not just the few who take cannabis for recreational purposes . ’
9 If you have n't got the telephone manual bit at the back which shows you all these facilities , then let me know and I 'll send you one .
10 The darkness of which Hilton speaks , and the darkness of the penitential understanding in the Passion meditations , may belong to different stages of development in the knowledge of God , but they are part of a continuous pattern of experience of death and resurrection which underlies them all .
11 Then there is also that nasty little disorder called ‘ eating amnesia ’ which afflicts us all from time to time .
12 But then realism , as she knows , like journalism , does not exclude analysis : in fact her first book , Sartre , had ended in a mild sense of exasperation against philosophy itself , which she believed had frustrated Sartre by making him unable to write a great novel , ‘ a tragic symptom of a situation which afflicts us all ’ .
13 War-time mobilisation acts as a single institution which grades them all according to its distinct purposes , thus serving as an external check upon their nature quite separate from the whims of the observer and the contingencies of their previous situation in life .
14 As far as the Bible is concerned there is very definitely a real but invisible ‘ spirit world ’ which surrounds us all .
15 We can observe that she is happy only when she is furious , and do not need to have it suggested that her earlier nickname of ‘ Thatcher Milk-Snatcher ’ derived from her own breast-deprivation , which denies her all happiness and allows her ‘ only the sadistic triumphs of tawdry political and military victories . ’
16 The association produces two useful booklets : Carpet Facts ( which tells you all you need to know about different types of carpet and how to choose the right colours and designs for your home ) ; and Carpet Care ( which gives tips on cleaning and maintenance ) .
17 That 's the idea behind Carpet Imagination , our 16-page brochure which tells you all you need to know about carpets and how they can improve your home .
18 You have to have a licence to have a C.B. and when you get your licence you also get given a rule book which tells you all the things you are and are not allowed to do and say when using the C.B. One of the rules is that you are not allowed to swear down the C.B. as anybody can listen into your conversation and hear you swearing .
19 ‘ You 're inviting into your lives a negative force , welcoming that which tempts us all , but transforming that emptiness , that jealousy , that hatred into a living , breeding monstrosity .
20 And over all these virtues put on love , which binds them all together in perfect unity .
21 The killing is repeated on ritual occasions , perhaps at first because the protection the totem gives them is not enough , or because they need to band together again to re-enact the crime which binds them all together , although they use a surrogate for the crime , not the actual father again .
22 Is there a single word which sums it all up ( e.g. loser , spoiler , thinker , cynic , martyr , goody-goody , complainer , doormat , groveller ) ?
23 The circulation of Good Housekeeping keeps going up and up , which gives us all a great buzz .
24 The ancient manuscript which sparks it all off is ingeniously devised to yield two possible meanings , one mystic , one mundane .
25 It 's her assiduity which enables them all to be so modest about their success — and they all are pretty successful , one way and another .
26 She continues : ‘ Ageism … is a prejudice which enables us all , young and old to consider old people as useless , incontinent , senile , asexual and immobile . ’
27 Will my hon. Friend confirm that the green belt , which enables us all to have a degree of green and open space and fresh air , has been doubled under this Conservative Government ?
28 The similarities between things called by the same name are indefinite and fluctuating ; one tries to pin terms down by definition , so that they can be used for strict inference , but Wittgenstein showed that in the vocabulary of natural languages the similarities are ‘ family resemblances ’ , by which A may be like B in one respect and B like C in another , but A like C in neither , so that it is useless to look for common characteristics by which to define the word which names them all .
29 If the previous chapter of this Report is taken seriously , however , there is a challenge which faces us all .
30 That is the problem which faces us all .
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