Example sentences of "in which such [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But if The Order of Things is thus concerned to analyse ‘ ensembles of discourses ’ that do not form a totality , it does not focus on the ways in which such forms of knowledges relate to the institutions in which and through which they are produced .
2 At the same time , it can also bring out the complex ways in which such forms of power also produce their own forms of resistance ; as critics like Stephen Greenblatt demonstrate , these are not separable processes but are simultaneous effects of power .
3 Until the manner in which such goods are dispersed within regions is better understood we can only assume , at present , that places with very high consumption are also the points of distribution where a paramount controlled such prestige exchange , consuming most locally and allowing the passage of a little to other places .
4 There is a considerable variety of ways in which such goods are financed and provided by a combination of private and public sector activity and different practices can be observed around the world .
5 While all disciplines have disputes over what constitutes worthwhile and well-founded knowledge , what holds each together is some measure of agreement over the boundaries in which such disagreements arise .
6 In this case , we feel that the regulation would be difficult to enforce , because of the relatively intimate circumstances in which such transactions are made : successful enforcement would depend a lot on alerting users of this type of credit to the disadvantages of following-on and the ways in which regulation could help .
7 Notions of similarity and the recognition of rhymes and rhythms present a possible way in which such orderings might be achieved .
8 He sees surveillance as the ‘ mobilising of administrative power ’ with the storage and control of information the key way in which such mobilisation takes place .
9 From the architectural viewpoint the greatest importance of this site , now so excellently opened up and preserved , is that it has preserved for us a provincial Roman city at a certain point in time — A.D. 79 — so that we can see for ourselves the buildings in which such citizens of the empire lived .
10 The most meaningful and effective way in which such output can be combined is a topic of on-going research ( Hull et al , 1991 ) .
11 The 1940s , with their cataclysmic effect upon the social structure and on ideas provided the soil in which such views could germinate and , in fact , marked the beginning of the sexual revolution .
12 In both formal and informal activities within the classroom , children use their vision in different ways , and observant teachers can help to identify visual difficulties by being alert to the ways in which such problems can manifest themselves .
13 There are relations that can be created by expressions of consent , and there are many in which such acts form or can form a component of their creation or perpetuation .
14 Whilst we recognise that the Government does not want local authorities to use development plan policies to limit change of use rights , we believe the final guidance should indicate the special circumstances in which such constraints may be justified , for example , in order to avoid environmental problems or to sustain the traditional employment base of a particular locality .
15 I have a good mind to ask you to serve full-time on my reporting staff , but I am selfish enough to want you to go on writing for me these exposés of low life , particularly the way in which such misery afflicts women .
16 The question about history then becomes the more interesting one of the relation between different significations , and the ways in which such differences can , or can not , be articulated and unified under the same horizon of totalization to produce a single meaning .
17 The kind of inferences that are called implicatures are always of this special intended kind , and the theory of implicature sketches one way in which such inferences , of a non-conventional sort , can be conveyed while meeting the criterion of communicated messages sketched in Grice 's theory of meaning-nn .
18 The complexity of this issue lies in the fact that the TNCs are themselves directly and explicitly responsible for the ways in which such processes work out in most societies , but they are also often indirectly and implicitly responsible in ways that are hidden from view .
19 The research aims to assess the extent and ways in which such companies have restructured their activities in response to the volatile international economy of the last fifteen years .
20 Recent work , notably in Cambridge as well as in the United States , has demonstrated the feasibility of exposing a female ovum to spermatozoa outside the human body — in which such exposure normally takes place — in a special medium .
21 These factors must also be taken into account when deciding whether the act of collective worship reflects Christian traditions and the ways in which such traditions are to be reflected in taken into account by the local statutory advisory council on religious education ( SACRE ) when it is considering an application by the head teacher of the school under section 12(1) of the 1988 Act for lifting or modifying the requirement for Christian collective worship at the school .
22 However , in a recent study a substantial decline in suicide rates among young white females ( under 25 years of age ) was found in areas in which crisis centres were established , compared with a considerable increase in those in which such developments had not taken place ( Miller et al. 1984 ) .
23 The recommendations in Form 22 lack legal force but they are a part of a long-standing history in which such verdicts have been recorded .
24 One way in which such factors are isolated is by comparing parents known to batter their children with a control group of parents who have no history of child abuse ( Lynch and Roberts 1977 , for example ) .
25 The manner in which such factors operate and interact in language acquisition is completely un-known .
26 Conventions must therefore be established and followed strictly , about the manner in which such instructions are to be given and their content fixed , so that it can not be a matter of dispute what these instructions are .
27 The strict sense in which such structures underlie the sentences is of course enshrined in the transformational component of the grammar .
28 The only way in which such communication could be measured would be by questionnaire .
29 The circumstances in which such compensation is payable are set out in section 169 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 .
30 To us it is clear that it was the forms of social organisation in which such evidence was carried that gave them this quality and not the intrinsic nature of the evidence itself .
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