Example sentences of "which [noun pl] [vb base] out " in BNC.

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1 Current research work is focused around six major themes , within which researchers carry out specific projects either with ‘ core ’ ESRC resources or as shorter-term projects funded by housing agencies .
2 In an earlier section of this chapter , a great range of activities which individuals carry out in maintaining a safe environment were mentioned in relation to preventing accidents in the home , at work , at play and while travelling .
3 One reason is that users have grown used to roads , for example , that are offered either free or at fees that reflect the cost advantages with which governments start out .
4 A method of starting a race , mainly used for large fleets , in which boards file out behind another board .
5 In the final analysis , much of the success or otherwise of a policy will depend on which firms carry out the operations .
6 The speed at which things wear out and break down rises fast when everything you own is cheap .
7 These ideas , which children work out for themselves , may differ from accepted scientific explanations , but they are not random or irrational .
8 A visitor arriving in Zurich for the first time will almost certainly do so with a preconceived idea of a feverishly busy city where austere-faced financiers wearing dark suits hurry past in search of the next billion dollars , where bankers huddle together in back rooms like a secret society , a place resembling a web from the centre of which threads reach out to manipulate the money markets of the world , and everything is subordinate to profit .
9 The crux of the Final Report of the National Curriculum History Working Group was stated in its introduction ( point 1.3 ) : 1.3 To have integrity , the study of history must be grounded in a thorough knowledge of the past ; must employ rigorous historical method — the way in which historians carry out their task ; and must involve a range of interpretations and explanations .
10 Developments across the country are uneven , but the shape of things to come can be seen in the greater provision of minor surgery by general practitioners , the increase in health promotion work in general practice , the employment of staff such as physiotherapists and dietitians to work alongside general practitioners , the establishment of shared care arrangements for treating conditions such as diabetes and asthma , and the introduction of ‘ treat and teach ’ schemes , in which specialists carry out some of their consultations in general practitioners ' surgeries and develop the skills of general practitioners in the process .
11 In retrospect , the techniques that have given molecular biology its pace have hung on the principle that life , which has evolved the manipulative techniques by which it is itself sustained , must also embody the techniques for which laboratories cry out .
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