Example sentences of "which [noun] is [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 In the case of settlements by virtue of which income is paid to or for the benefit of an infant unmarried child of a settlor , the definition is extended to include " transfers of assets " ( s670 ) .
2 Another company to which Ferranti is known to be talking is Daimler Benz , the giant West German vehicles , aircraft and electricals group .
3 Midland shares were the most actively traded on the stock market and fell 7 to 365p on announcement of the all-paper terms compared with the 400p which Lloyds is believed to be prepared to pay .
4 One dreads a future version in which Freud is set to work on the decision of Higgins and Pickering to set up together as two old bachelors .
5 I enclose herewith an extract from Spare Rib Magazine , in which reference is made to an agreement between Spare Rib Magazine and W H Smith in regard to placing the magazine in the Women 's Section .
6 Thus the observer looking for evidence of ‘ knowledge , skills , or expertise ’ in the activities of the specialist team might see it in their tendency , relative to the generic team , to visit more and to recommend and provide a wider range of services ; to make fewer offers of service that are refused ; and to encounter fewer occasions on which re-assessment is thought to be necessary .
7 The next stage is coalification : the very slow process in which peat is converted to coal .
8 This catchment area is around the lakes of Ullswater and Hawes Water from both of which water is piped to Manchester .
9 These cases are significant because they illustrate one of the ways in which standing is related to the merits of the case .
10 The TBMs start work from a point some 45m down while the bottom of the shaft acts as a mucking basis from which slurry is pumped to the nearby Fond Pignon spoil disposal site .
11 They concluded that by taking people out of their own homes , however modest , they were being removed from conditions which they knew and made them feel secure into ‘ a new social environment in which priority is given to the collectivity over the individual . ’
12 Quantitative summaries of causal effect such as d , however , are nearly all asymmetric , taking different values depending on which variable is presumed to be the cause of the other .
13 It may be an advantage for the expert 's decision of which enforcement is sought to be accompanied by reasons , because the foreign court is likely to be more sympathetic to enforcing it in that form .
14 The spacious porch leads into an elegant hall , from which access is made to the lounge , bar and dining room .
15 At ground-floor level , the stair devolves into a central hall , from which access is gained to the single lower-storey bedroom , a waiting lobby associated with the office , and the bathroom/WC as well as the living-room which is reached by passing below the gallery .
16 In addition to the type the way by which soil is attached to a surface has a material effect on the cleaning required .
17 Only in rejecting the terms on which life is offered to him can a man discover his real dignity , his real self . ’
18 The context in which man is created to work is controlled by a specific mandate .
19 Subject to Section 310 of the Act , every Director or other officer of the Company shall be entitled to be indemnified out of the assets of the Company against all losses or liabilities which he may sustain or incur in or about the execution of the duties of his office or otherwise in relation thereto , including any liability incurred by him in defending any proceedings , whether civil or criminal , in which judgement is given in his favour or in which he is acquitted or in connection with any application under Sections 144(3) or ( 4 ) or 727 of the Act in which relief is granted to him by the Court , and no Director or other officer shall be liable for any loss , damage or misfortune which may happen to or be incurred by the Company in the execution of the duties of his office or in relation thereto .
20 Subject to Section 310 of the Act , every Director or other officer of the Company shall be entitled to be indemnified out of the assets of the Company against all losses or liabilities which he may sustain or incur in or about the execution of the duties of his office or otherwise in relation thereto , including any liability incurred by him in defending any proceedings , whether civil or criminal , in which judgement is given in his favour or in which he is acquitted or in connection with any application under Sections 144(3) or ( 4 ) or 727 of the Act in which relief is granted to him by the Court , and no Director or other officer shall be liable for any loss , damage or misfortune which may happen to or be incurred by the Company in the execution of the duties of his office or in relation thereto .
21 Burgess 's Class 1 prose is transparent in the sense that the reader need not become consciously aware of the medium through which sense is conveyed to him .
22 In 1909 : ‘ The unattached cyclist on entering Italy with his wheel must deposit 42 fr. 60c. with the custom-house authorities , which sum is returned to him ( though seldom without difficulties ) when he quits the country . ’
23 These requirements were substantially met before 1969 by the creation of discretionary trusts , by which property is given to trustees upon trust to apply the income on capital in favour of such one or more members of a group of beneficiaries as the trustees shall in their absolute discretion determine .
24 The expression I am quoting is uttered by Dyer , and it is an expression which Ackroyd is given to using in his books .
25 The decision as to which allocation is to apply to any block of four patients is simply made by random selection of a digit in the range 1 to 6 .
26 Defending barrister John Rogers QC , for Burgess , put forward another alternative vagal inhibition , in which pressure is applied to the vagal nerve in the neck .
27 ‘ NEED , not ability to pay , is and will remain the basis on which care is offered to all by the National Health Service . ’
28 Their suspicions were fuelled when the ward allocation book , which denotes which nurse is allocated to which patient , disappeared .
29 Having established the point that it is the patient who ultimately may set the limits to the doctor 's intervention , it is now necessary to consider the duties which arise in the usual circumstances in which treatment is consented to .
30 The court does not offer any criteria of awfulness ; but it may be that the law will reflect those factors involved in the analysis of the circumstances in which treatment is considered to be ethically not indicated .
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