Example sentences of "[coord] [Wh det] [noun] they " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Frankie did not understand how it could be so important which end of the Bible they preferred to read or which church they were both too busy to attend every Saturday and Sunday .
2 Yes , well anybody can come in and trace their family , so long as they know that they came from Sussex at some point and they 've got something to work on , they 've got some idea of which town or which village they came from , then usually the Parish Registers and things like the Census Returns over the last hundred years are usually able to help them .
3 Yes , well anybody can come in and trace their family so long as they know that they came from Sussex at some point and they 've got some , something to work on , they 've got some idea of which town or which village they came from .
4 Similar complaints were heard in the Church of England about the condition of curates during the nineteenth century , a time when what pay they got came from the parish priest under whom they served or whose place they took in the parish while he lived elsewhere .
5 said that at the beginning of the year , I do n't know what way they predict this or whatever way they it goes you know
6 No no er erm well er there is Prunus that 's a plum I mean a cherry that grows up and various ones like that the only trouble is with these type of things they can be more of a nuisance than the trees that you do have now because those trees growing up those spindly ones as you put it erm some gardeners call them or whatever name they use I but the trouble is bits die in the centre of those and they tend to drop down and they can be in time more far more of a nuisance than the trees they 've got now which seems to me quite suitable .
7 I have read the report of the guardian ad litem and such information as I have which would indicate her view of the local authority 's actions now on several occasions and I have to say that I do not understand what findings the justices believed that they were making or what reasons they were giving for their decision in that brief statement , which I have just quoted in full .
8 Whenever we spoke about haircuts or what clothes they 'd give us to go home in , Anderson would say , ‘ I do n't care what I look like , I 'll go out stark naked , I just want to leave . ’
9 They were n't sure if they would find Rose there at all or what way they would find her if they did .
10 The judges who decided McLoughlin worried about the most accurate description of the principles underlying the precedent cases cited to them , although they knew that nothing in the explicit extension of any convention settled what these principles were or what weight they should be given .
11 He did n't know ‘ what statement Mr. Gibbon had made to the other gentlemen or what reasoning they could have employed so as to sign a paper declaring the fact of urinous vomiting to be utterly impossible — here I must be at issue with them believing as I do … from my little physiological knowledge , that vomiting of urine for 26 weeks is by no means impossible … ’ .
12 There 's no reporting back , for instance , so they do n't know how well they 've done or what mistakes they make .
13 performances of individuals , to see who did badly and which questions they got wrong ;
14 Ask your stylist what they are doing and which products they are using .
15 The following describes each of the LIFESPAN privileges and which options they allow you , as a privileged LIFESPAN user , to perform .
16 The following describes each of the LIFESPAN privileges and which options they allow you , as a privileged LIFESPAN user , to perform .
17 I mean we could all spend all day discussing that particular issue but up until the decision is made and which road they 're gon na go down we do know it 's gon na be banding but on what on what basis is it gon na be ?
18 With an odd feeling that he was asking because it was expected of him rather than out of genuine interest , she replied somewhat stiltedly , ‘ Once I 've a clear picture of the items to be displayed , and which room they 're to go in , I can begin the first rough draft for the catalogue . ’
19 Choreographers must then decide how many and which details they need to add to disclose the particular features of the story , theme and/or music that they wish to communicate .
20 Cathy Massiter made it very clear in her television interview that MI5 and Special Branch alone decide who merits a dossier and which group they belong to and can open a file on any person or group of people or organisation they please , put into it anything they like , be it only gossip or hearsay , and once opened the file remains there indefinitely .
21 However , as part of a whole-school policy on language , teachers of English and of other languages ( and possibly of other subjects ) should meet and discuss what framework of description and which terms they propose to use in the school .
22 These arguments suggested that the starting point for criminology should be a consideration of how the legal rules that define crimes come about and whose interests they serve .
23 They receive information on it from people they trust , and whose opinion they hold in high regard .
24 A committee may be pardoned for insisting on hearing candidates they had never heard , but it is scarcely pardonable that they should expect one who is not a candidate , and whose qualifications they had the best opportunity of knowing , to stake his reputation in any such way .
25 There is underlying , understanding and theory to this , but of course if you want to read French literature , you 've got to learn the vocabulary ; if you want to do chemistry you 've got to know the elements and what order they come in , and there 's always a certain amount of learning with any subject .
26 He asked how many eggcups she had and what colour they was
27 Know your medicines is divided into three sections : section 1 gives general information on using medicines , and advice on questions to ask a doctor , nurse or pharmacist ; section 2 covers the actions of medicines on the body system ; section 3 is an index of medicines to enable users to check what each is for and what effects they can have .
28 In a document leaked to TODAY earlier this year Estell revealed that Selina ordered guests not to kiss her and said her performance as Terry Wogan 's stand-in proved where her interests lay — in ‘ how much money people earn and what clothes they wore ’ .
29 This claim gives rise to an ontological dispute over the nature of individuals , which underlies the issue of reducibility ; for holists and individualists disagree about how individuals are to be characterised and what properties they possess .
30 If the advantages of decentralization of decision making are to be preserved , firms must be able to operate within a set of rules for competition that enable them to identify what strategies are likely to attract scrutiny , and what strategies they can pursue without hindrance .
  Next page