Example sentences of "which [verb] [adv] the " in BNC.
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1 | The dot location task , which involves predominantly the right hemisphere , was expected to remain unaffected . |
2 | Mansell 's appeal , which involves only the fine and not his subsequent ban from the Spanish Grand Prix , will be heard on 18 October . |
3 | Koch decided that no exchange could be located within 1,000 feet of a school , which ruled out the possibility of a communitybased programme . |
4 | Saunders has a cloud over him with the possibility of legal action by Paul Elliott over a tackle which ruled out the Chelsea defender for the season . |
5 | In wet conditions any gully on a north-facing crag is bound to be treacherously slippery , which renders even the easiest scrambling pitches dangerous . |
6 | Section 2 will further discuss the issue of consciousness as Life-Force from a new emerging scientific perspective which parallels precisely the ancient Vedic tradition . |
7 | The climb , which tackles directly the steep rock buttresses of the Croz Spur , is undoubtedly an important addition to modern extreme alpinism in the range . |
8 | Any help which tackles only the surface expression of the doubt lacks compassion and is bound to fail . |
9 | It is the official authority ‘ traditionally ’ associated with management , which goes down the scalar chain . |
10 | Near synonyms are most common , with true synonyms ( which mean exactly the same thing and which are used in precisely the same context ) being more unusual . |
11 | Six Senior Clerks were each in charge of the Consular , the Slave Trade and four political departments , which divided up the world between them into convenient geographical areas . |
12 | Consultant pathologist Dr John Ryan said she was more susceptible to the cold because of a condition called hypothyroidism which slows down the body 's metabolism . |
13 | However , when searching for a particular route from the ‘ z ’ , a linear search must be employed to establish whether it exists or not , which slows down the search time compared with the 26-way tree where all 26 routes are allocated . |
14 | An additional plus for the Anatom is its lining , which has in-built Antibac , an antibacterial system which slows down the growth of bacteria on the skin , an unusual but welcome concept in shoe technology . |
15 | A system of transitional payments is in operation , which slows down the effects of these changes on current claimants . |
16 | The hairs on its furry body are covered with microscopic hooks which pick up the slightly sticky pollen grains as the bee busies around the flower . |
17 | Like bony fish , they have lateral line organs which pick up the water movements made by prey . |
18 | In the same issue the former FDLJ leader , Mohammed Adoyta Yussuf , now president of the FRUD , was quoted as saying that the FRUD " wishes to replace the tribalist regime of President Gouled with a government of national unity which represents equally the Issas , the Afars and other communities " . |
19 | ‘ He brings the same singleminded approach to the job , ’ says Donal Murphy , secretary of the Irish Creamery Milk Suppliers ' Association , which represents mainly the dairy sector and is the second largest farm body in Eire . |
20 | But it is possible to describe the commonalities between these feminist psychologies , in a way which points up the importance of the associative approach for feminist psychology in general . |
21 | Such work makes an association between psychological writing and apparently non-psychological narrative forms , which points up the ubiquitous but usually denied role of these forms in psychological discourses.i |
22 | Second , we also promote good health : in 1992 the BMA published ‘ Cycling : Towards Health and Safety ’ ( OUP ) , which points out the health benefits of cycling , and they have since issued the leaflet ‘ Bike for your Life ’ , which has been distributed to all GP 's . |
23 | Second , we also promote good health : in 1992 the BMA published ‘ Cycling : Towards Health and Safety ’ ( OUP ) , which points out the health benefits of cycling , and they have since issued the leaflet ‘ Bike for your Life ’ , which has been distributed to all GP 's . |
24 | Second , we also promote good health : in 1992 the BMA published ‘ Cycling : Towards Health and Safety ’ ( OUP ) , which points out the health benefits of cycling , and they have since issued the leaflet ‘ Bike for your Life ’ , which has been distributed to all GP 's — a copy of this is enclosed . |
25 | Winters to freeze your marrow and a spring wind — the fen blow they call it — which whips up the peat and chokes your lungs like smog . |
26 | To prevent this happening chemical agents known as sequestrants are used which bind up the residues preventing them from dropping out of solution . |
27 | It was wild countryside , steep hills and grassy plateaux , scarred and gashed by steel-grey rocks and rapid , frothing rivers which tumbled down the hillside . |
28 | He was joint editor of the English Historical Review , 1939–58 ; professor of history in the University of Edinburgh from 1945 till his resignation on health grounds in 1954 ; and in 1951–2 Ford 's lecturer in Oxford , delivering the lectures which became probably the most widely known of his books , King George III and the Politicians ( 1953 ) . |
29 | His wide experience , combined with great technical and organizing abilities , enabled him to achieve improved efficiency in the railway workshops , which became all the more necessary when during the war tank , gun , and aircraft production and repair were added to their activities . |
30 | Cloud-cover problems will diminish the number of useful images from the 20–22 per year that are theoretically possible , but even so the monitoring of surface phenomena that change during the year ( such as agricultural crops and natural vegetation ) or which change over the years ( for example the extent of the built-up areas of cities or the extent of forest cover ) is possible . |