Example sentences of "many [prep] [Wh det] [modal v] " in BNC.
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1 | If it was too low , Michael kept mishearing lines and producing bizarre variations , many of which would , under other circumstances , have been funny , and did in fact produce some snorts of ill-advised laughter from the overwrought cast . |
2 | They are , first , the reforms of industrial relations which have created harmonious working practices , all of which were opposed and many of which would be reversed by a Labour Government . |
3 | Set up in 1983 under the Finance Act , the BES has been a major facilitator of the channelling of funds to businesses ( Peat Marwick 1986 ) , many of which would apparently not have been able to raise capital without the help of the BES , although it was also reported that very little of the funds were provided for seedcorn businesses . |
4 | They characterise the management of secondary schools as having a number of features — many of which may be attributed to the absence of effective staff management policies . |
5 | The earliest inhabitants of the area some 4000 years ago , however , left traces of their presence in the form of tools like stone axes , many of which may be seen in the Armagh County Museum . |
6 | Such processed foods therefore have added to them artificial colours , flavours , flavour enhancers ( usually monosodium glutamate , MSG ) , texturizers , emulsifiers and preservatives — most of which are chemicals of no particular use to the body and many of which may actually be harmful . |
7 | Alternative word candidates are combined to form candidate phrases , many of which may be ungrammatical or meaningless . |
8 | There are plenty of theories , and plenty of assumptions , many of which may have at least a part of the truth . |
9 | Present-day stateless societies are not necessarily representative of all , or even most , of the earliest human communities , many of which may have had from the beginning some differentiation of political functions based upon age or gender ; and in any event enquiry into such questions remains largely speculative . |
10 | The more powerful , well-established organizations were often able to put forward their own projects — many of which might simply have been cancelled because of capital cut-backs after the International Monetary Fund imposed constraints in 1976 . |
11 | Nine out of 10 are routine calls , many of which could be carried out by mini cabs . |
12 | The primate centre received requests for 300 macaques and 14 chimpanzees , many of which could not be supplied because of a policy that it should be primarily a supplier for TNO institutes . |
13 | When Swift returned to Worcester a few days later , he was greeted with the ringing of bells , illuminations and bonfires , at many of which could be heard the tune of " The King shall have his own again " . |
14 | It is also questionable whether it is wise to kill adult males indiscrimately , many of which could be harem masters . |
15 | In Dock Yard Road , a Boat Museum houses the country 's largest collection of inland waterway vessels , many of which can be inspected by visitors . |
16 | Odour nuisance is often due to mixtures of organic compounds , many of which can be removed from the air or gas stream by simple combustion , on burning producing oxides of carbon and water which are odourless . |
17 | The brothers converted part of the building to make a chapel , and set up an industry in old railway huts which produced exquisite ecclesiastical embroideries , many of which can still be seen in local churches . |
18 | There followed some weeks of relative quiet over the island , with only desultory engagements , many of which can be listed briefly : On 17th. an unidentified Hurricane pilot claimed a Bf110 damaged ; a Bf110C of I/NJG 3 force-landed in the sea off Malta , Fw . |
19 | The description given of the family is full of these subjective statements , many of which can act as red herrings . |
20 | In the case of the vocal works — many of which can be dated virtually to the day of composition — this has led to a fundamental change in our perception of Bach 's activities and outlook . |
21 | Such change can represent a high risk , which it is important to minimise through cost-effective trials , demonstrations and evaluations — many of which can be arranged by the technology provider . |
22 | Neil Davidson , counsel for the Deans , said they denied allegations levelled at them by the shareholders , many of which can not be reported because of restrictions imposed by Lord Cullen . |
23 | Laing points out that this approach generates a lot of ideas , many of which will be worthless , as happens in a brainstorming session . |
24 | The outcome of all this national activity is a formidable timetable in schools , many of which will , over the next few years , also have to face local financial management and the introduction , on a national basis , of teacher appraisal . |
25 | There 's a choice of 32 family hotels , many of which will be operating a Kids Club for youngsters aged between four and 11 . |
26 | Banks and building societies will repossess and resell over 100,000 homes this year , many of which will be bought for prices well below those of similar properties in the area . |
27 | Marketing chiefs ‘ have been looking at the mathematics and have worked out that volume counts , ’ says Cunningham , pointing to Unix 's one million a year run rate against the huge base of Windows users — increasing at one million a month — many of which will be targeted for NT . |
28 | In summary , the future pattern will probably include the following ingredients : 1 recognition that oral reading and silent reading should proceed simultaneously , from entry into school ; 2 longer periods given to individual reading interviews , which will necessitate re-organisation of the curriculum , with a greater emphasis on group work based on collaborative learning ; 3 the group work will have clear outcomes , many of which will start with silent reading and result in reading aloud for communication ; 4 the teaching of phonics will be seen as one possible cueing system only , resulting in the use of more intrinsically interesting texts which will enable contextual hypotheses ; 5 the realisation that books as such may be diminishing , will demand that other forms of print are incorporated into reading aloud in school , for example , from computers and teletext ; 6 the teacher 's professionalism will be accepted as lying in the understanding of the reading process and the development of the child , and in his or her power to train the child to read independently for real purposes as early as possible . |
29 | Students are also involved on a programme of Independent Studies , many of which will be focused on issues of Language across the curriculum . |
30 | We will see that various strategies can be adopted , many of which will be discussed in more detail in the next two chapters . |