Example sentences of "which [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 On the one hand it was essential to try to make the peasant movement more revolutionary in character by uniting the peasants and all the exploited , wherever possible , into Soviets ; on the other , the obligation to render the most active assistance to revolutionary-liberation movements rested in the first instance with the workers of the country on which the backward nation was colonially and financially dependent .
2 The compression has caused thrusting on an eastward-dipping plane along which the continental crust of the Pacific Plate is being heaved up ( Fig. 3.30 ) .
3 The closed-loop input impedance is easily found as To find the closed-loop output impedance , a source , is considered to be connected to the input in which case Assuming for simplicity that the feedback network negligibly loads the output and so from which the closed-loop output impedance is If further as is often the case ,
4 With reference to figure 10.8(b) , application of Kirchhoff 's voltage law to the input circuit yields and since the closed-loop gain may be represented as This time the closed-loop input impedance is With regard to the output impedance , if is the input impedance of the feedback network , Kirchhoff 's laws applied to the output circuit give Assuming that the impedance of a source of e.m.f. connected to the input is negligible compared with , Kirchhoff 's voltage law applied to the input circuit yields Hence from which the closed-loop output impedance is Often the first term of this expression is negligible compared with the second in which case
5 Applying Kirchhoff 's voltage law to the output circuit and assuming that the feedback network negligibly loads it However , Kirchhoff 's current law applied at the input gives and so from which the closed-loop output impedance is
6 The changing nature of these relationships can tell us much about broader aspects of political change in Mexico , in particular the extent to which the corporatist pact with peasants , labour and popular sectors has been eroded by the impact of the economic crisis and the search for new forms of political representation within civil society .
7 This is the deep sleep level , at which the unconscious mind is obtaining the greatest amount of real rest .
8 Many pre-school children will have played spontaneous games in which the pretended reading ( and writing ) of stories , lists , letters and so on shows their own recognition of the pleasurable and purposeful nature of reading .
9 Charles Manson was not merely a symptom of the drug age ; he was the epitome of a certain sickness that gripped some sections of society , by whom he was exalted as the inspiration for the killing of so-called pigs , the word daubed in blood on the living-room walls of director Roman Polanski 's home , after the so-called Sharon Tate murders , for which the bearded prophet of the drug age is still serving life .
10 To Bernstein this demonstrates not simply the convention of explicitness which the middle-class child has learnt and has recognised as appropriate for this context , but the development of ‘ elaborated code ’ with all its associations of abstraction , logic etc .
11 During this time the nurses can get to know the patient , and vice versa , and establish the patient 's normal condition against which the post-operative state can be compared .
12 The entertainments manager wants to hear Frank sing and gears up for a rip-roaring session , at which the hapless hero launches into ‘ Early One Morning ’ — echoes of the audition Crawford did as a child for Benjamin Britten 's production of The Turn of the Screw .
13 Like all essentialisms it assumes an obvious , definable , homogeneous essence ( British culture ) into which the hapless migrant might be inducted , given a suitable dose of English and an undiluted diet of the official school curriculum .
14 The ‘ design for living ’ shown by a species is the outcome of this selective process and is related not at all to any eventuality that may arise but to the set of conditions , the ‘ niche ’ , to which the evolutionary process has confined the species .
15 It is the time during which the evolutionary process was producing the human form as it now is , and laying down the pattern from which man , in remote retrospect , can now extract the necessary information on which to lay the foundation of the concept of the Created God , and to understand how he must develop that concept .
16 The Baltic Red group , to which the Danish Red belongs , is mainly based on the German Angeln type and includes the Estonian Red , the Latvian Brown , and derivatives such as the Bulgarian Red , Romanian Red and the Red Steppe of the USSR .
17 A second example involves an argument by means of which the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahé claimed to have refuted the Copernican theory a few decades after the first publication of that theory .
18 ( 6 ) what was interesting was that little Richard came home from his Toronto school with his Newfie jokes the content of which the substantive content was identical to Irish jokes which my son comes home with from Edinburgh schools
19 The head of department , for example , depicted the library project as something which had to be seen as a specific development in the context of a GRIDS exercise in which the broad range of curricular provision came under consideration .
20 It appears far below , framed by near-vertical cliffs on both sides of a vast hollow into which the narrow road plunges in a series of sharp zigzags .
21 ‘ The five codes create a kind of network , a topos through which the entire text passes ( or rather , in passing becomes text ) ’ ( p. 20 ) .
22 Ellen Solomon and Walter Bodmer first pointed out that the variation in human gene sequences represented a powerful new mapping tool , which laid the basis for studies that led to the human genome project ( in which the entire genome will be mapped , characterised functionally , and eventually sequenced ) .
23 The degree to which the entire godhead is evoked as a unitary spiritual conception depends upon the circumstances .
24 The final chapter of this book , written by John Channon , comprises both a brief survey of the course of the Revolution and Civil War in Siberia , and , drawing on the work of a number of Soviet historians and also western experts such as Evan Mawdsley , Norman Pereira and Jon Smele , an analysis of the horrendously complex , bloody and confused antagonisms with which the entire territory was racked .
25 The holder of this visiting professorship could then live here for a year and deliver one or two open lectures at which the entire university might once again have the experience of being assembled in congregation .
26 John Pain ( flying P3731 ) : ‘ This was a brawl with some 15 CR 42s in which the entire flight got mixed up some miles out to sea at about 18,000 feet between St. Paul 's Bay and Sliema .
27 A major problem that arose at an early stage was the reconciliation of the local authority 's requirements for one car-parking space per flat with the DoE 's refusal to fund a scheme in which the entire ground floor would be used for parking .
28 This was the production ceiling , a limit within which the entire organization was to contrive to hold its aggregated output , with every member adhering to its own assigned individual quota .
29 They are like Cuvier 's heel-bone , a minute particle of the whole from which the entire anatomy of the terrestrial animal can be reconstructed .
30 This fire officer , however , refused to allow the use of a sizeable proportion of the props , around which the entire show was structured ; and , although the Prince and Princess of Wales were arriving in one and a half hours ' time along with five Cabinet ministers , and the cast would have no time to rehearse without the props they relied upon , he was not to be budged .
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