Example sentences of "which [pron] [be] [adj] [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 Still a device was invented to cover up the disappearance of an old landmark ; and at the accession of Her present gracious Majesty , she was unlawfully proclaimed by a new title ‘ Head of the Commonwealth ’ , subsequently legalised by the Royal Titles Act 1953 , against which I am proud to recall that I protested in my place in the House of Commons .
2 ‘ There is , in my judgment , no evidence from which I am entitled to conclude that in deceiving his wife as to the effect of the documents , [ Mr. O'Brien ] was acting on behalf of the bank .
3 It could be that er he wishes to distract attention between the interesting arguments going on about one man one vote which I 'm pleased to hear that Mr has won .
4 Counsel 's second argument was that all the evidence presented to the court was that the defendant had been seen engaging in actual violence , but not threatening it , as the section requires , On this submission the Court concluded that there was sufficient evidence in the narrative presented to the jury from which they were entitled to conclude that there was threatening behaviour .
5 His team came tenth out of the twenty five that competed , a result with which he was pleased considering that many of his competitors ( although with amateur status like himself ) were well funded and backed by sponsors .
6 According to Mr Gerald Kaufman Lord Bridge was able to complete his inquiry in five days , after which he was able to report that allegations of improperly authorized interceptions were without foundation .
7 ( In the light of which it is pleasing to discover that in 1566 , when Rainoldes was a 17-year-old student at Oxford , he acted the part of a female in a play composed tor Queen Elizabeth — see Paine , The Learned Men , 23 ) .
8 Back at his home near Florence he completed his book on hydrostatics , in which it is interesting to see that he was nonplussed by the fact that a thin flake of ebony , though denser than water would nevertheless float .
9 There was , therefore , in each case , material from which it was possible to infer that the principal debtor acted as the agent of the creditor in obtaining the security .
10 Gibson and Gibson ( 1955 ) responded vigorously to this suggestion , arguing that there were no clear cases in which it was necessary to conclude that the associations formed by cues during discrimination training were responsible for changes in the distinctiveness of those cues .
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