Example sentences of "of [Wh det] one [is] " in BNC.

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1 In this field there are two common ideas , of which one is true and the other is false .
2 By visiting two or three clubs in an area , you 'll get a better idea of which one is best for your type of boating .
3 Each generation contains two quarks and two leptons , of which one is an electron or something like it and the other a neutrino .
4 Estimating awareness no doubt raises its own problems , but at least it can be conducted in terms of the things of which one is made aware .
5 Invulnerability may be achieved and expressed in several ways , of which one is the flight into creativity .
6 Add to this the Great Australian Bight and the Bass Strait — for if we did not , it would be difficult to regard Australia as a Pacific nation , which would indeed be a foolish error — and we have arrived at what seems the most appropriate and comprehensive definition of our goal : one oceanic bloc , twenty-four marginal Seas ( of which one is designated Inland ) , five Gulfs , four Straits , one Canadian Confusion and one Australian Bight .
7 The presupposition that for something about a stimulus to mediate localisation it must be something of which one is conscious , was abandoned .
8 Obviously this will not do , for pain is itself a sensation , not something of which one is aware through a sensation .
9 Techniques of manufacture are explained , and evocative Chinese verses , of which one is given here , are disposed around the gallery .
10 Psychoanalysts have talked , for example , about the process of ‘ projection ’ , in which aspects of oneself of which one is fearful may be projected on to other people .
11 Economic Man , seeing two boxes of chocolates , of which one is cheaper because the manufacturer has not had to pay for consequential damage to some third party , would choose that cheaper box .
12 So we might add to the tripartite analysis the fourth condition that nothing can be known which is inferred from a false belief , or from a group of beliefs of which one is false .
13 It is the tension between it importance and its brevity , both of which one is aware of as one watches .
14 The limitations of a single linear scale are demonstrated in relation to realizations of five phonological variables in the city of Liverpool , of which one is an optionally merged variable ( u ? ) and ( o ? ) as in sure and shore .
15 If a word can be segmented into more than one morpheme , of which one is a root , any morpheme which is not a root is an affix .
16 In contrast to the earlier situation , there are seven unknowns ( X , Y , p x , p y , w , r and n ) , of which one is determined by the choice of numeraire .
17 We have seven equations , ( 7–21 ) ( 7–23 ) , ( 7–25a and b ) , ( 7–26 ) , and ( 7–27 ) , of which one is redundant .
18 It also repays the effort to clarify one 's own strengths and weaknesses , for an objective inventory of what one is good and bad at , finds easy and difficult , is attracted to and repelled by , helps in two ways .
19 In general , the actual psychological causation of an utterance may be related to all sorts of different degrees of endorsement in one 's actual beliefs and attitudes of what one is meaning to say .
20 A related point requiring emphasis is that much of what one is inclined to regard as the mere ‘ facts of the case ’ are often ‘ institutional ’ facts our recognition of which is itself partly the adoption of an attitude .
21 Thus although it is commonly suggested that the notion of certainty is relevant to the analysis of claims to knowledge , but not to the analysis of knowledge itself ( e.g. , in Woozley , 1953 ) , this leaves us with no method of explaining why certainty should be required before one can claim knowledge when it is not required for knowledge itself , i.e. , for the existence of what one is claiming .
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