Example sentences of "and [Wh det] it " in BNC.

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1 In submitting its scheme of delegation to the DES for approval , each LEA had to make decisions about which of the permitted discretionary items it intends to control from the centre and which it will delegate to schools .
2 It remembers which signals it has amplified and which it has not , and this information forms the 0s and 1s of a binary memory .
3 This has enormous implications for the cost and length of time it takes to expedite cases , both areas over which the Institute has been severely criticised and which it is keen to see reduced .
4 It was that of an articulate minority within the party which had a complex relationship with the class upon which it depended and which it claimed to represent .
5 It had become , as it were , welded into one thick compact mass , nearly as hard as wood , and which it was impossible to separate , unrole , or divide in any other way than by cutting …
6 Horsley was being slowly crippled by a rare type of paralysis spreading from his ankle , which meant that he now had to walk with a stick , and which it was feared would eventually put him in a wheelchair .
7 On the other hand , the policy formation process is a largely uncontrolled one : on the whole , the government decides which groups it will consult or listen to and which it will ignore ; and empirical evidence shows what one would intuitively expect , namely that some groups are in a much better position to influence government than others .
8 To sum up then , according to the so-called unorthodox view , the company , or rather individuals on the conglomerate 's behalf , deals on either inside information acquired in the course of business about another company , for example , an investment banking client on the verge of announcing an increase in expected profits ; or on information ‘ leaked ’ by one arm of the conglomerate about a long or short position it has taken as market maker on specific shares and which it would like to off-load into the accounts of customers in the conglomerate 's fund management arm .
9 In each case a corporation has its reputation , separate from its members , capable of being adversely affected by defamatory statements and which it is entitled to protect by recourse to an action for libel .
10 The temple illustrates the animal fetishism that lies at the dark roots of Egyptian religion and which it never really outgrew .
11 The institution was at that time entirely concerned with the education of teachers and future teachers , and recruited predominantly , though not exclusively , from the conurbation in which it was located , and which it was designed to serve .
12 Thus , Boswell and Johnson found a room at the crowded New Inn , which no longer exists : the corner where it stood , and which it once shared with the city jail , is now occupied comprehensively by a bank .
13 Section 261 clarifies the position of notes to the accounts ; references in the Act to the accounts ; include any notes to the accounts containing information which the Act requires to be given and which it requires or allows to be given in a note to the accounts .
14 Third , in exchange for such lending they acquire a portfolio of paper assets ( claims on borrowers ) which will pay an income to the intermediary , and which it may ‘ manage ’ by buying and selling the assets on financial markets in order to yield a profit for itself .
15 I am thinking of a feeling of confidence which has been built up and which it would take some drastic change to break down .
16 Software for garden design , estimating and scheduling , as used in many local authority parks and recreation departments , and which it is hoped to obtain for Horticultural Education , has the potential for use in the horticultural Departments of the Gardens .
17 The Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace ( CCJP ) issued a statement in Harare on March 27 accusing ZANU-PF of responsibility for the near-fatal shooting incident which , allegedly , occurred in the presence of uniformed police , and which it described as a " gross misuse of state machinery for intimidation purposes " .
18 As earn outs are based on future performance and are only payable in the future , they enable the purchaser to agree to a price it may not be able to afford at completion and which it will not be obliged to pay unless profits are generated .
19 " The Independent " argued that it could not in natural justice be bound by an order made against another newspaper , on different facts , and which it had been given no opportunity to oppose .
20 That sets out the growth of the savings and which it contains in the report with paragraph and appendix reference numbers on them and it sets out for each of the groups , their proposed budgets .
21 Ratepayers face a £40 , bill for the case brought against the council — and which it won .
22 BRITISH Coal yesterday offered to private investors five more collieries where production has ended and which it no longer wants to operate .
23 That is where our freedom lies and it is that freedom which the fatwa threatens , and which it can not be allowed to destroy . ’
24 Present also , in that statement , is his conviction , which is suggested by the word ‘ unswerving courage ’ , that the pursuit of truth may be difficult , that it may lead one to call in question things that one does n't want to give up and which it is painful to surrender .
25 White ceiling , white curtains shifting in a breeze , a huge bed neither would admit they had seen and what it meant .
26 Mr Ford has shown an absence of leadership and an absence of grasp of what this country is and what it ought to be . ’
27 Both he and Mr Heseltine warned against making light of the huge trade deficit and what it said about the manufacturing base of the economy .
28 As Lisa Jardine has recently reminded us , in the obsession with dress and what it signified socially , we witness contemporary tensions and struggles between classes , between residual and emergent cultures , between the mercantile order and what it was actually ( or seemed to be ) replacing , between rank and wealth , between innate and fiscal value ( Still Harping , 141 — 2 , 1 50 ) .
29 As Lisa Jardine has recently reminded us , in the obsession with dress and what it signified socially , we witness contemporary tensions and struggles between classes , between residual and emergent cultures , between the mercantile order and what it was actually ( or seemed to be ) replacing , between rank and wealth , between innate and fiscal value ( Still Harping , 141 — 2 , 1 50 ) .
30 So before examining the challenge of the female transvestite , we need to consider the more general attitudes to dress and what it signified .
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