Example sentences of "which [pers pn] [be] presented " in BNC.

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1 Here is another of the paradoxes of anorexia nervosa : I must , in my unconscious , have wanted to grow up , but at the same time I was determined not to , because the models of potential adulthood with which I was presented were either repugnant or impossible to attain .
2 The parcel with which I was presented was the size of a largish shoe-box and surprisingly heavy .
3 Then came the birthday tea , at which she was presented with a planted basket of flowers , a much-signed card from all her Medau friends , a bone china tea service , pink rosebuds , and a basket filled with fruit and some of her favourite delicacies .
4 Jeffrey : I think that lesbians and gay men have been very creative in the sort of relationships they have tried to develop over the last fifteen years — because it 's very easy simply to copy the models which we are presented with .
5 No matter how well intentioned an author may be , no matter how good his work is considered , a lavish photographic book of this kind , and of this price , must stand or fall on the sheer quality of the pictures selected and the way in which they are presented .
6 Many women , confronted by Kohlbergian questionnaires , ask for , or contribute out of their own imagination , concrete detail which might help them resolve the moral dilemma with which they are presented .
7 Again we see that in their subtlety and the manner in which they are presented they are still French fantasies .
8 For example , with the exception of contexts in which they are presented contrastively , pronouns , being context-dependent , always carry a low degree of CD irrespective of where they occur in the clause .
9 In one form or another these issues , which are really all variations of the same issue , are of very long standing , but the style in which they are presented is liable to change very rapidly .
10 ( 64 ) … and what is more the ideas themselves , if we are not too overawed by the empressement with which they are presented , on examination are seen to be not so very original after all .
11 Methodological principles need to be discussed at the rather abstract level at which they were presented in the preceding chapters ; otherwise it is not always easy to assess the applicability of a set of methods to a new research context .
12 Eventually Mr Holdsworth was summoned to attend a Council committee at which he was presented with a list of 26 disciplinary offences , none of which had been raised with him before his suspension .
13 But the open goal and late penalty with which he was presented both hit the woodwork .
14 The Duke of Edinburgh was the guest of honour at the ceremony , at which he was presented three jars of cherries from the orchard .
15 One way of putting the record straight about school meals is to invite parents of new children for a free meal with their child so that they can not only taste the food but see the way in which it is presented and the way in which the children are supervised .
16 Accordingly it becomes necessary to consider the further possibility that learning might be exceptionally rapid when there is a contrast in novelty between the critical stimulus and the environment in which it is presented .
17 We can suppose , however , that associations might be formed between the stimulus and the context in which it is presented .
18 Perhaps the least interesting is the possibility that the change of context modifies the way in which the CS is perceived , either because of some change in the physical nature of the signal ( the properties of an auditory cue , for instance , are likely to change according to the shape of the space in which it is presented ) or because there is some change in the way the cue impinges on the animal ( if different contexts promote different patterns of orienting behaviour , the same cue , defined physically , may be experienced differently in the contexts ) .
19 The secret of whetting an audience 's appetite for music of the long-distant past has much to do with the way in which it is presented .
20 The sermons in which it is presented are arguably the finest contribution to moral philosophy in English .
21 For example , the pottery made in an ordinary Indian village may start as a ritual object whose meaning is derived from the ceremony within which it is presented .
22 Evidence about it comes from a range of sources and that evidence is not uniform in the way in which it is presented .
23 The presentation and sequence of the data will also suit the context in which it is presented .
24 Backing this up was the constant confrontation with the Swastika ; its image , made more powerful by the angle at which it was presented , affected the deepest centres of human intuition and acted in what is called in Hinduism a ‘ yantra ’ , a design to stimulate consciousness .
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