Example sentences of "which were later [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Indeed , the screenplay is credited to one American and two Japanese writers , an effort which parallels the way the film was actually shot — with both Japanese and American units completing sections which were later blended together in the editing rooms .
2 The companies often preferred slaves to white skilled labour and as a result slaves aspired to skilled positions which were later denied to them as freedmen .
3 Maximum standardization of components was achieved in Churchward 's locomotives , the advanced design features of which were later adopted by other railways .
4 In 1911 Gow won a Trinity prize fellowship with a dissertation consisting of a miscellany of papers , several of which were later expanded into valuable articles .
5 This model was supported by five climato-morphogenetic zones ( Büdel , 1963 ) which were later expanded to seven ( Büdel , 1969 ) and then to eight ( Büdel , 1977 ) .
6 At a cemetery in Carpentras in south-eastern France on May 10 , the body of a Jewish man who had died two weeks previously was disinterred and , according to first reports which were later contradicted , impaled ; the grave of a woman was also disturbed , and more than 30 others were damaged .
7 These were constructed on standard BR underframes and mounted on BR2 bogies , which were later replaced by B5 bogies ; the body contour was as the two 1941 saloons and power car .
8 Riot shields were issued in 1970 but they were clumsy , metal shields which were later replaced by perspex versions .
9 In origin such legislation is likely to have been similar to the Pactus pro tenore pacis , the edict of Chilperic I and the Decretio Childeberti , which were later attached to the Pactus Legis Salicae .
10 These researchers soon went beyond this narrow brief , and their study of the Bible and various other historical sources led them to formulate many of the theories which were later embodied in the royal supremacy .
11 For example , Nigel Lawson chaired the Sub-Committee that dealt with Lord Mackay 's proposals for reforming the legal system which were later embodied in the Courts and Legal Services Bill .
12 The needs of commerce and government created a native middle class ( from which were later to come the leaders of nationalist movements ) .
13 On 2 March 1988 the first defendant surrendered the lease in consideration of the plaintiff accepting goods listed in an inventory , which were later sold for £309 , in full and final settlement of all claims and demands against him under the lease .
14 These are thought to be models of the original coaches used on the BCR which were later sold to the Golden Valley Railway .
15 The contradictions and misunderstandings which were later to centre around the objects of the Popular Front were , in the main , the product of this attempt to reconcile the defence of parliamentary democracy with the advocacy of eventual revolution .
16 The graveyard 's administrator , Antonio Eustaquio , stated that the bodies , six of which were later identified as those of political prisoners , had been buried in the early 1970s , when the country was under military rule .
17 She wrote articles for Pearson 's Weekly which were later published as Small Talks on Big Subjects ( 1916 ) .
18 They made several unsuccessful attempts before managing to enter Paperweight and take the items , most of which were later recovered .
19 Sea level change inspired studies because many areas possessed evidence of stages of Quaternary erosion marked by river terraces and adjacent or other areas presented former raised shorelines around coastal margins together with evidence from buried valleys and remnants of former sea levels which were later submerged .
20 This Act created county councils and county borough councils , which were later used as the framework for educational administration ( see 1902 Education Act ) .
21 The conflict also showed features of her approach and style which were later to become familiar .
22 The key words , which were later to become something of a catch-phrase , were ‘ fresh start ’ .
23 Caughey 's statement paralleled the ideas about ‘ British standards of justice ’ and the responsibility of the British government under the Government of Ireland Act which were later put forward by the CSJ and the CDU , but in Caughey 's case they were able to coexist with a strong commitment to republicanism .
24 Eminent in her own field , she clearly defined the main concerns of this conference , which were later endorsed by the appearance of the Guerilla Girls , whose printed statements — ‘ it 's Even Worse for women of Colour ’ — were distributed throughout the week .
25 He had proposed a more extensive No. 10 staff , a smaller Cabinet and many of the modern techniques of business management in the civil service which were later elaborated in the Fulton Report .
26 Emphasis in the denudation chronology of southeast England centred upon drainage evolution and upon erosion surfaces which were later described as planation surfaces ; relied upon interpretations based upon morphological evidence and information from fragmentary deposits ; and produced a model which involved early Tertiary planation , mid Tertiary uplift , late Tertiary planation , early Quaternary planation by a Calabrian shoreline and subsequent valley development during Quaternary sea levels at successively lower altitudes .
27 The recognition of Saxon settlements , not under medieval villages but in open sites which were later abandoned , has also indicated that settlement patterns themselves have altered and the desertion of individual settlements within the pattern , even in quite recent times , means that settlement patterns are as dynamic and changing as the settlements themselves .
28 Derain , although as early as 1904 he had executed a still life in which he seized in a more or less superficial way on some of the aspects of Cézanne 's art which were later to fascinate and influence the Cubists , did not begin to look at Cézanne really seriously until 1906 .
29 The amendments ( which were later rescinded ) restricted the right to vote to those who had lived in the constituency for at least two years , or elsewhere in Estonia for five years or more ; deputies themselves had to have lived in Estonia for at least ten years .
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