Example sentences of "[noun pl] which he [verb] [vb pp] in " in BNC.

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1 For example , if the accused was reconnoitring a home preparatory to burglary , he may not be guilty of this offence if he picks up some ladders which he has found in the garden .
2 It may be significant that Clermont , which was one of the Aquitanian cities consigned to the east Frankish kingdom of Theuderic and his successors , was also one of the cities which he had invested in 507 , in the aftermath of " Vouillé " .
3 His solemn burial was at Constantinople alongside the cenotaphs of the twelve apostles which he had placed in the church of the apostles on the city 's highest hill .
4 The translations by Alberto Fortis , an Italian traveller and scholar , of fragments of epic poems which he had collected in Dalmatia and published in 1771 , brought the rich oral tradition to the notice of men like Herder and the western European scholars of the Romantic movement .
5 There was then a general discussion , along lines somewhat reminiscent of the dialogues of Plato , though perhaps Nicholas , who guided and recorded the sessions , had also in mind the proceedings of the lay oratories which he had visited in Italy .
6 Finally , since the buyer is also anxious not to exclude any of his rights implied at common law or under the SGA in addition to the express rights which he has included in the contract , he makes it absolutely clear that all such implied rights will also apply to the contract .
7 These feelings tend to be transitory but some patients remain psychologically disturbed for many years and , in a few psychological difficulties develop in the convalescent period which were not apparent during the acute episode.While these problems can sometimes be anticipated in hospital on the basis of the patient 's reaction to his illness , and any premorbid difficulties which he has encountered in the past , a better idea of his potential can be gained by following him during the convalescent period to observe how he copes with the various stresses and strains which he encounters during this time .
8 The name of ‘ Derrida ’ has been used in such a way as to imply that it refers to a real person who has certain ideas and theories which he has expressed in various books and essays , and which this introduction has tried to repeat , treating them as signifieds that can be represented in a number of different forms .
9 Hammond had a brush with the Commonwealth 's accounts committee in 1651 , but protested that he had accounted fully and properly for all the sums which he had received in all the three armies in which he had served ; he pointed out that his account from July 1649 on was with the army in Scotland , where by this time George Monck ( later first Duke of Albemarle , q.v. ) had succeeded him as lieutenant-general of the ordnance .
10 These were mere fragments of the complex arrangements which he had made in order to secure his throne , and they were entirely necessary to Henry if he was to have sufficient support among those families — perilously few and divided in their allegiance — who alone could ensure his survival as king of England .
11 What however he did seek to do , starting from about nineteen-hundred erm and ten , or nineteen-twelve , was to apply the same methodological procedures which he 'd applied in mathematics , to a range of philosophical problems .
12 In a style modelled on the Platonic dialogues , Justin here interpreted Old Testament prophecies which he saw fulfilled in Jesus and in the present life of the church , already spreading throughout the known world .
13 When he finally reached Marseilles , he expected to find the fleet of over a hundred ships which he had commissioned in advance .
14 But Finch produced earlier perambulations which he had discovered in the Exchequer .
15 But two days later he was on duty , coloured bright orange from iodine on cuts and bruises got at the elections which he had attended in the Jlulat interest .
16 In announcing his veto to a White House gathering of Republican lawmakers and businessmen , Bush denounced the " irresponsibility " of Congress for having rejected the economic recovery measures which he had outlined in his State of the Union address in January [ see pp. 38711-13 ] .
17 Then , when King John took over the French lands which he had inherited in 1200 , he was allowed to do so only on condition that he should recognise them as being fiefs held of the king of France .
18 Indeed many of the disagreements of the following years seem to be associated with cities which had once been held by Charibert , and this was to hold true even after the murder of Sigibert , since lands which he had acquired in 567 became bones of contention between his son , Childebert II , and Guntram .
19 In political matters , he had acquiesced in the practices which he found established in England , notably antagonistic though they were to the libertas ecclesiae in the Gregorian sense of this phrase .
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