Example sentences of "[vb pp] [coord] [Wh det] he " in BNC.

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1 If the plaintiff has been unable to work at all up to the date of the trial , his loss will be the entire net remuneration which he would have earned ; if for a period he has been able to earn something , but not as much as he would have earned had he not been injured , his loss for that period will be the net difference between what he has earned and what he would otherwise have earned .
2 She knew why he had come and what he would tell her , and she did n't want to hear it .
3 Worship , you see , is the action of the entire congregation who together proclaim what God has done and what he continues to do ; we feed on his word — sacrament and Scripture — and are strengthened by his Spirit and sustained by mutual fellowship .
4 " It would have been immensely preferable for my return to be accomplished by the [ legal ] process , " de Gaulle told Dulac , but added cryptically : " Tell General Salan that what he has done and what he will do is for the good of France . "
5 In self-correcting drills , the pause is followed by the correct response , permitting the learner to compare immediately what he has said and what he should have said ( Mackey 1965 ) .
6 If you reach the conclusion that the asking price is reasonable , ring the agent and ask if any other offers have been made and what he thinks the owner might accept .
7 And then what else could he have done but what he did ?
8 It was a reaction for which Police Chief Darryl Gates was widely criticized and which he , in retrospect , admitted had been a serious mistake .
9 Man must learn to distinguish between those things which are given and which he must accept as part of his creatureliness , and those conditions which , exercising his responsibility towards creation , he must seek to change .
10 I 've got , I , I had a rough idea of what he 'd got and what he had n't now .
11 All of these activities meant that he could not get on with his new play , of which the first two scenes were already drafted and which he had planned , tentatively , to finish in time for the Edinburgh Festival of 1952 .
12 A confidence which Mahmoud had anticipated and which he had invited Owen along to undermine .
13 The ‘ adaptive ’ function is based on the proposition that what we call crime today includes forms of behaviour that will be crucially necessary to future society — Durkheim 's ( 1938 ) examples , are the ideas of Socrates and liberal philosophy which were once criminalised but which he sees as vital for contemporary society .
14 There is history in the accounts Kapuscinski gives of the confusions and uncertainties which he has experienced and which he has tried to interpret .
15 To Gerald Thomas , who experienced a lot of Ken 's problems — mainly his sexual difficulties , the director remembered for me ; his dissatisfaction with a part of his life which was neither fulfilled nor which he even wanted fulfilled — Ken was ‘ a child , a child who was always showing off ’ .
16 When he reached maturity , we would be in a position to know precisely which of his behavioral patterns he had inherited and which he had learned .
17 Not so much the compromises , the deceits , the hypocrisies affecting his work , his women , his children , even his friends , but the sense of despair and failure hovering over him , as though he was trapped and did n't know how it had happened or what he should or could do .
18 The blood of this world which he had created and which he was slowly killing .
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