Example sentences of "[Wh adv] [pron] [vb past] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Whenever I played with other children it flew after me .
2 She was n't in the mood to cope with Kegan 's heavy playfulness , the sort of labored gallantry he produced whenever they met at official hospital functions .
3 He was to be found lurking in the band 's dressing room whenever they ventured into Mancunian territory , which was often .
4 Also , he found that whenever he moved into one group or another , the warren rabbits evidently knew who he was and treated him as the leader of the newcomers .
5 Whenever he spoke of these matters it was with a flexibility and charity such as those holding views less firm did not always display .
6 For instance , they prohibited HERA from endowing her horse with speech , for they considered this unnatural ; they would also return the sun to its true course , whenever it deviated for any reason .
7 She found herself wondering painfully how she compared in that respect with this Sybil .
8 She was curious to know how she looked to other people .
9 Ronni was n't quite sure how she felt about that judgement .
10 Lisa could n't figure out quite how she felt about this development .
11 Leonora thanked him quietly , not quite sure how she felt about this idea .
12 What she said to me on the subject of the race riots and how she felt in that context makes me think that this stage in her life was nothing to do with race .
13 which you know maybe you , you , you 'd like to erm sort of er see how you related to those sort of people .
14 How you got into this work .
15 ‘ I know naught of how you came into this plight , girl , and I care little enough , but this I know — you have broken the spell-wall and opened Andernesse to the powers of the dark !
16 Would you mind telling us , Mr Major , how we got into this mess and how we 're going to get out of it ?
17 Again we must delve back in history to understand how we got to this position .
18 . was the fire brigade chief , was a newspaper man , and this was how we ran in this village .
19 ‘ Come here while I teach you how we fought in those days . ’
20 It makes me shudder now to think of it , how we waded into those strawberries and did n't suffer any ill effects afterwards .
21 To explain why they were not employed as frequently as they were amongst the middle class until the inter-war period involves consideration of the complicated relationship between the occupational characteristics of both husband and wife with their respective values and expectations and how they related to each other .
22 It is hard enough to tell how characteristic these figures were in the twelfth century ; impossible to tell how they compared with earlier centuries .
23 Who had done it already despite the English , French Canadians and how they felt about each other .
24 The carers were asked how they felt about these problems , and whether any were difficult to cope with .
25 The project involved an in-depth analysis of British Steel 's operating units to examine how they stood against international competition .
26 Here 's how they dealt with that sort of problem in Athens .
27 ‘ I think the whole system is totally wrong , how they dealt with this case and how they deal with similar cases .
28 We developed an understanding of what they thought , what they felt , and how they behaved towards each other .
29 They mostly supplement the picture of the Soviet political system , how it operated in different circumstances and how it created and controlled its nuclear-energy network .
30 His own task was to make sure , no matter how it appeared to other people , that he constantly checked across from his private life of personal belief — and back again — to the professional , public and accountable life of a head .
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