Example sentences of "which [adv] be [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The 7 million tonnes of straw could , by proper conversion into animal feed , product 600,000 tonnes of beef , which alone is worth £1,000 million at wholesale prices , not to mention additional processed meat and pet-food .
2 Sor if I sorted out being able to book at this restaurant which only is about I 'd be in
3 But this time , faced with an orchestra which apparently was at first slow to respond to his blandishments , the musician took priority over the Mahlerian moraliser and he revealed many details and subtleties of the score while keeping its huge overall span firmly within his sights .
4 But the approach is not adequate by itself : on the one hand , not all of the functions which government consciously decides to perform are public ; and on the other hand , there may well be functions performed by non-governmental bodies which have not attracted government attention , encouragement or participation but which nevertheless are of public importance .
5 So observed income in period is a reflection of a base earning from an individual 's raw uneducated ability or talent and past investments times their rates of return minus any current investment ( which usually is in the form of forgone earnings ) .
6 She recorded much of this early life in her fascinating ( if rather coy ) autobiography Dust Tracks On A Road and revisited a fictional version of Eatonville in her most famous novel Their Eyes Were Watching God ( both of which still are in print ) .
7 What is important is the change in conditions of those employments which clearly are of one kind in making the marginal workforce more vulnerable .
8 Two courts which strictly are outside the English legal system are of importance .
9 Ironically , the only current movie which really is like a classic ghost story has n't been hyped as part of the fad .
10 What is needed is generous help to ensure their children survive and aid systems which really are of benefit to the people .
11 How much control had the monarch over appointments to offices which legally were in his gift ?
12 The organization has initiated many of the schemes which now are under discussion — the IGBP , for instance , has been strongly influenced by NASA proposals .
13 Third , a labour division of the High Court would contribute to the process of constitutional reform in Britain which surely is to be a key political issue in the 1990s .
14 After a few more days in Salamanca , during which you and I could do no work in common , your friends left in a great uproar of drunken invective , shouting political slogans — which fortunately were in German — against the Franco regime .
15 According to one deponent , the duke had threatened to remove the countess to Middleham , at which she yielded , ‘ considering her great age , the great journey , and the great cold which then was of frost and snow ’ .
16 According to one deponent , the duke had threatened to remove the countess to Middleham , at which she yielded , ‘ considering her great age , the great journey , and the great cold which then was of frost and snow ’ .
17 CURRIE are embarking on a three-year campaign to raise the profile of their sevens tournament which again is to be sponsored by the Caledonian Brewing Company .
18 Then there are toxic , corrosive and carcinogenic exhaust fumes and the spreading intrusiveness of traffic noise , which again are by no means limited to city centres .
19 Blank et al have pulled together all those niggling influences which previously were like a series of half-formed sentences and have made something coherent and splendid out of them .
20 Like the Law Society it can use the genuine argument that its members are highly qualified and governed by a strict code of ethics which ultimately is to the benefit of clients .
21 In this context we may distinguish ( i ) the impartiality which is part and parcel of making moral or legal-judgments on the basis of formulating universal rules permitting or prohibiting certain types of conduct as distinct from making decisions only about particular persons and particular occasions : the impartiality not just of universalisability but of rules which actually are to be universalised ; ( ii ) the impartiality of being a non-involved person which is particularly relevant to the position of the person who is applying legal or moral rules to particular circumstances and which is directly to do with the characteristics of the judge who according to this standard must have no personal interest in the outcome of the case , but which may also be relevant in the process of legislation since legislators may have particular and personal interests in the outcome of the legislation in question ; ( iii ) there is the idea of impartiality as a norm of moral and judicial reasoning which has to do with giving due consideration to all relevant factors , a practice which may further but is not guaranteed by impartiality of the first two types .
22 As the world warmed , the global sea level rose at rates which certainly were without parallel in the last 100,000 years , but until this month no continuous record of this sea-level change had been available to scientists .
23 We have had an exceptional level erm , probably the reasons such as stand-by and maternity absences and a variety of others which essentially are above the level that we normally budget for .
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