Example sentences of "which [vb base] with [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Here a discreet entrance boasts cool marble floors and imposing columns which combine with fine wood and soft lighting for an impressive welcome .
2 Adorno thus argued that Lukács 's aesthetics was an example of identity-thinking , because his realism privileged works of art which correspond with social reality .
3 From a non-evolutionist standpoint , however , the problems that can be posed concerning the state , within a Marxist conception , are limited to the following : the formation of the state as a consequence of a structural transformation of primitive communal societies ( so far as these can be properly located and studied ) ; the types of state which correspond with determinate , historically realized , modes of production , and the conditions which produce a transition from one type to another ; and in the case of capitalist society , the structural characteristics , including the contradictions , which may effect a transition to another ( unknown ) type of society .
4 It is important to stress that UDCs are not the lead agencies in such services as housing , Education and health , which remain with local authorities and other public agencies .
5 The initial study of cancer cell behaviour can only be done with a living animal in order to define those ‘ test tube ’ characteristics which correlate with uncontrolled growth and spread of tumour cells within the whole body .
6 In addition to deposition , events such as activation of components of the complement or clotting factor cascades can occur , which lead to generation of moieties which interact with other cell types — eg neutrophils , lymphocytes and macrophages — involved in inflammatory processes .
7 Kempson 's emerging model ( ESRC project R/000/23/1220 ) assumes that the grammar defines a mapping from natural language sentences onto logical representations which are not fully determined ( some aspects of interpretation being defined as constraints which interact with pragmatic processes ) .
8 Firstly , there is the intrusion of ill-designed new buildings in sensitive parts of the high street : buildings which are too high and too wide , which break with traditional floor levels and introduce large dead areas over the shopface .
9 For example , the editor will need to check lists of headwords which begin with lower-case letters .
10 But if the absolute rise in eps is used , companies which begin with high eps have an unfair advantage .
11 Peter van Soest starts Nutritional Ecology of the Ruminant with a brief historical resume of the study of ruminant nutrition and the development of food analysis and then moves through a series of chapters which describe with great clarity the mathematics involved in the measurement of throughput rate and digestibility .
12 It is based on the agreed belief that a regular count of several basic demographic factors is vital for an understanding of the structure of our society , and at each census it is customary to ask certain specific questions which deal with current matters of special importance .
13 Although there are chapters which deal with specific periods or projects such as the Impressionist and vache styles , and the commission for a series of murals for the Knokke Casino , Sylvester has written a thematic rather than chronological account of the artist 's development .
14 Many of the concepts explained might have appeared self-evident but a thorough grasp of these basic points is essential for understanding later sections of the book which deal with international banking and finance .
15 In each of these case studies — which deal with major problems or issues which have prompted analysis from all three perspectives — we briefly outline how Marxists , pluralists and elite theorists analyse the problems ; we then show how , and to what extent , they believe these problems can be resolved .
16 Priority in the IGBP is intended to be given to those areas which deal with key interactions and significant changes on the time-scales of decades to centuries , that most affect the biosphere , that are most susceptible to human perturbations and those that will most likely lead to a practical , predictive capability for global change .
17 All historical writings , even those which deal with complicated and abstract ideas , narrate stories about people and their lives .
18 In denying that bilinguals are special in this respect , I am arguing for an approach to the study of linguistic interactions which bridges the old barrier between " variationist " studies , which deal with social and stylistic variation in " monolingual " , socially stratified speech communities , and " ethnographic " studies of code switching and related phenomena which are normally confined to bilingual or diglossic bidialectal communities .
19 And the most complete cure , the structural cure , is the adoption in manufacturing and service industry of that form of organisation which extends the application of democratic principle into industry ; which , by offering as of right equality of esteem , reward related to participation and responsibilities which go with ultimate authority , appeals to self-respect and self-discipline : the adoption , in short , of the industrial co-operative form .
20 He notes the self-perpetuating nature of modern mass production : ‘ Thus vast supplies of products come into existence which call forth an artificial demand that is senseless from the perspective of the subject 's culture ’ ( 1968 : 43 ) , and argues that just as academic pursuits such as philology and archaeology , which start with certain aims , may develop as methods creating infinite classificatory refinements for their own sake , so people may become the mere instrument of that which they originally developed : ‘ The infinitely growing supply of objectified spirit places demands upon the subject , creates desires in him , hits him with feelings of individual inadequacy and helplessness , throws him into total relationships from whose impact he can not with-draw , although he can not master their particular contents ’ ( 1968 : 44 ) .
21 Typical problems which arise with major schemes are that :
22 His later work has tended to modify the distinctness of each of these , as well as exploring problems which arise with particular forms of knowledge ; for example , the fact that the social sciences may involve truths of several different logical kinds , or the difficulties of explicating the kind of knowledge embodied in literature and the arts .
23 The disputes that followed were to drive a wedge between Law and Docherty which persist with increasing bile and acrimony to the present day .
24 Likewise the excess rate for males over females , for town dwellers over country dwellers , for social class V over social class I , all of which coincide with smoking differences , can be explained by other means .
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