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

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1 After that , says Mr Gardner , Miss Richardson will come racing back to attend the December premieres in Paris and London of Damage , the Louis Malle adaption of Josephine Hart 's novel about a middle-aged man obsessed with his son 's fiancee , in which she stars with Jeremy Irons .
2 Wright ( 1984 ) makes a similar point in discussing the narrative style of one of Sutcliffe 's speakers , Malcolm , which she contrasts with one of her own informants , Tania .
3 The fact is that Dame Maggie alone owns to charisma , a responsibility which she bears with easy , unpretentious authority , dominating the stage whether bestriding it or merely sitting by idly .
4 Lucy is a departure in that she appears to react to small segments of spoken English , to which she responds with her own Ameslan , in which her ability became roughly equal to Washoe 's .
5 She , the German , does an interesting physiotherapy job to earn money as her doctor father pays her rent but then expects her to fend for herself , which she does with poise , professionalism and purposefulness .
6 Violet has mostly dug up her patch and planted vegetables in it , but she has left a little strip of grass , about three foot long , which she mows with a lawn mower she bought at a jumble sale for two pounds .
7 She is now settled in to her new home , which she shares with another Rottie and a German Shepherd .
8 This is contrasted with her noisy , untidy , ‘ funky four-storey walk-up ’ on the East Side which she shares with two other girls , one of them being Tyne Daly , the future Mary Beth Lacey of TV 's Cagney And Lacey .
9 Margery Kempe finds the actual humanity of Christ 's life and death a pattern of living which transfigures the ordinary demands of daily life with a sense of the holy — an emotional engagement with the humanity of Christ which she shares with the " affective piety " of her age .
10 But Sandra is probably at her best in her live shows , which she writes with her partner John Boskovich and performs alone apart from a band .
11 There are cases where , from an economic point of view , the marriage valuables represent the purchase of a husband by the bride rather than vice versa , and the general European pattern , which is met with in many other parts of the world , is for the principal payment to be the bride 's " dowry " , a set of assets which she brings with her into the marriage as a part of her inheritance from her own kin .
12 The only quibble is that the materials of Vic 's erotic dream about Robyn - in which she splashes with nymphs in a pool before firing an arrow — are a bit literary .
13 Her materials consist of marble dust , gypsum cement , resins and rhoplex , but the ways in which she works with them are based on a kind of body language , using gestures that are related to her subject matter .
14 L's utterance in line 45 begins with a comment on the photograph in London English ( " that 's me " ) but after a pause she switches to Creole to comment on V 's photography : " Valerie cut me off there , boy ! " which she follows with a laugh .
15 His method is to distinguish philosophy , which he equates with experience , from the various modes of experience .
16 But he is a rarer bird — a composer who can talk about his music and with words , sketch the remarkable individual sound world which he has created , and which he changes with every new work .
17 He shows his annoyance with some intimidating facial expression , backed up by a sparse selection of adjectival punctuation invariably using the ‘ f ’ word , which he uses with considerable effect .
18 He is a veteran of the Scouting movement and has a keen interest in Irish traditional tales , which he tells with gusto .
19 This illusion of realism can be the result either of the text 's conformity to the rules of the genre ( which Todorov associates with classicism ) or with ‘ what readers believe is true ’ ( which he associates with naturalism ) .
20 Sir Walter thinks he has captured something ( the soul , the imagination ? ) which he associates with joy and his kind of pleasure .
21 So again you see that he feels threatened and er does n't trust Nick because of erm these ideas which he associates with Nick .
22 However , I 'm sure that it will be only a short time before the imaginative gentleman of this funeral business ( or after-care service , as it apparently now likes to be called ) will overcome these problems that in any case may be outweighed by one great advantage to which he points with pride : namely , that it is above all discreet , in that the girlfriend of the departed may view at any time , giving any name , and the wife and family will be none the wiser !
23 Bernstein , for instance , in his attempt to attribute less ‘ context-dependence ’ and greater ‘ objectivity ’ to certain language uses , correlated these characteristics with certain ‘ codes ’ which he identifies with certain social classes ( 1971 ) .
24 But he keeps on spending as much as before , topping up his spending account with cash from the piggy-bank , which he replaces with little bits of paper saying that the spending account owes the piggy-bank money .
25 When his father died in 1974 , Jochen became the Principal of the College , the administration of which he combines with his medical career .
26 All a buyer gets to see are the sample boxes opened on the trading floor , on the strength of which he negotiates with the merchant .
27 At Connaught Brown there are fourteen new abstract paintings by William MacIlraith ( 24 March-20 April ) who is known for the picture surfaces which he achieves with a special wax and pigment technique .
28 The lawyer advocates formal legal propositions which he supports with reasoned arguments .
29 Next month it 's the turn of Andrew Gold ; his 8-bar solo includes a 2-bar riff which he harmonises with Waddy .
30 Before him lies a dark , trackless , formless , chaotic field , which he probes with the antennae of his techniques and ideas , seeking by his action to transform it into pure presence .
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