Example sentences of "[prep] [noun] what [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what studies have been undertaken with regard to transfer of the avionic repair department from RAF Carlisle to RAF Sealand .
2 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what progress he has made in making available a pool of British-registered merchant ships for emergency defence use .
3 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what progress has been made by his Department to prevent bullying in the services ; and how much money has been spent in dealing with this matter since June 1988 .
4 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what progress he is making towards restoring a flying role for squadrons of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force .
5 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what steps are being taken to encourage competitive tendering for military research and development .
6 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what representations he has received about the future strength of the Territorial Army in Scotland .
7 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what information he has on the number of jobs in the north-west region of England which are related to defence requirements .
8 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what offer of assistance he has given to the member states of the former Soviet Union to assist in establishing defence hot-lines .
9 Sorry , you did that , right , well think back to what you said about future what Freud said the future .
10 With Michael Heseltine as Trade Secretary , John Major may achieve for industry what Margaret Thatcher never tried to — the long-term view .
11 Smith saw the opportunity to do for books what Jack Cohen had done for groceries at Tesco 's — ‘ Pile 'em high and sell 'em cheap . ’
12 We would try to do for Rotherham what Checkers discos had done for Sheffield .
13 When the author of the Life of Edward the Confessor says that he trusted the cause of God to his bishops , and ordered secular judges to act fairly , so that honesty could have royal support and evil its just condemnation , this may be an indication that someone did for Edward what Wulfstan had done for Æthelred and Cnut .
14 Suppose , on the other hand , that he is guided by law as integrity , which does not limit law to what convention finds in past decisions but directs him also to regard as law what morality would suggest to be the best justification of these past decisions .
15 It insists , in other words , that they must treat as law what conventions stipulates is law .
16 On the other hand , he has a great deal of confidence in Noorda 's intellectual prowess and innate capitalism to deliver for Sun what Sun needs from USL as USL 's ‘ largest customer ’ : low royalties , available source , open interfaces , technological innovation and resolution of any channel conflict with SunSoft .
17 Ripley , a winger with wonderful control for his size and strength , can nearly do for Blackburn what John Robertson did for Clough all those years ago .
18 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what assessment he has made of the resource implications for the health service in Scotland of the incidence of hypothermia in the winter months .
19 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what increase in financial support is available to farmers in less-favoured areas for 1992 ; and if he will make a statement .
20 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what proposals he has for assisting councils to increase security in high tower block housing .
21 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what proposals he has for the alleviation of homelessness in Scotland .
22 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what meetings he has had with hon. Members on each of the proposals for setting up national health service trusts .
23 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what representations he has had supporting the principle of hospitals becoming trusts outside the national health service ; and if he will make a statement .
24 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what representations he has recently received about the governance of Scotland ; and if he will make a statement .
25 To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what action he takes to enforce procedures laid down in national health service circular No. 1975 ( GEN ) 46 .
26 Of course what people find impossible to understand about you is that you genuinely do n't know what effect you have on men . ’
27 And of course what Mr does not refer to in any of his submissions n is the need for new settlements in that area to be have to have very long access roads .
28 This is of course what architects are supposed to do .
29 What sort of notes what sort of things are you gon na do within your running of training sessions for a group training session or it could be one-to-one does n't really matter .
30 Instead , Sisson maintains that the real reason is that in Britain multi-employer bargaining has increasingly been found to be incapable of performing what employers regard as its major function , namely the neutralisation of the workplace from the activities of trade unions .
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