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

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1 This is consistent with the range for the magnetopause signatures which are also widely believed to result from FTEs .
2 Neither are Norway spruce ( P. abies ) and lodgepole pine ( Pinus contorta ) which are also widely used in forestry programmes because they grow relatively quickly and can tolerate the poor soils that are characteristic of British uplands .
3 His theory was developed to account for the ‘ fit ’ of the southern hemisphere continents , and the existence of clearly related fossil organisms found in continents which are today widely separated .
4 They are embodied in unpublished theses , research reports of limited circulation or in monographs and journals which are not widely distributed .
5 Gradually hormones , which are already widely used in the PILL , are released into the bloodstream .
6 Another group of immunoglobulin-like cell adhesion molecules includes the so called intercellular adhesion molecules , ICAM-1 and ICAM-2 , which are more widely expressed , for example , on epithelial and endothelial cells , and V-CAM , which is expressed on endothelial cells .
7 Avoiding any " anthropomorphic " assumptions , observations of the regularity of respiration , open or closed eyes , movements and vocalisation have resulted in the definition of five mutually exclusive syndromes or states which are now widely accepted .
8 He gave many lectures on the materia medica which are still widely used today , and undertook a systematic classification of all the symptoms and signs produced by the remedies .
9 It was characteristic of the radical agitational movements in Derry to echo ideas which were already widely accepted , but to put them forward in a more aggressive , combative and militant style .
10 As we have seen , the decisions of the Roman Council of 1059 , which were more widely distributed than almost any others in the century , never mentioned the decision about the Eucharist .
11 Structuralism is a difficult concept , which is nowadays widely used and abused .
12 When I refer to the ‘ Popular Purgatory ’ I am referring to the Purgatory which is most widely known — the place referred to in Roman Catholic teaching and which is said to be arrived at after death .
13 Interviewing is the subjective technique which is most widely used in higher education .
14 I still have a foothold in Baldersdale , which is not widely known .
15 Interestingly he identifies examples of the use of case management in care of emotionally disturbed children , an area of work which is not widely known in the United Kingdom although practitioners might wish to argue that it is implicit in much of practice expectations .
16 The acquisition of the share capital of a private company which is not widely held and is capable of being concluded by private contract will often be considered for a dispensation .
17 Do not confuse it with the Beta-Zeta pair , which is more widely separated ; Zeta is of magnitude 4.7 .
18 Matrix organisation is a structure which emerged in the USA during the 1950s and 1960s and which is now widely practised in a variety of forms .
19 The Germans do this better than most : Frankfurt airport has a synthetic studded floor which is now widely imitated .
20 If one were to peruse the extensive range of surveys of the applications of the rational expectations hypothesis to macroeconomics , one would come across a different framework of analysis , one which is so widely accepted that it is rarely explained in any detail , still less is its theoretical basis probed critically or its conclusions called into question .
21 The Prince was more than keen to help ; as a result of that approach he convened a meeting , known as the Windsor Conference , which is still widely regarded as one of the most significant advances ever made in race relations .
22 The purpose of the law , which was not widely practised by the time of Jesus , was to preserve both a family line and the inheritance of family possessions and property .
23 Four years later , with the publication of Anglo-Saxon Attitudes , which was both widely reviewed and highly praised , his reputation as a leading novelist was secure .
24 This tallies with the figure which was quite widely quoted to us by lenders of something in the region of one per cent of credit transactions turning into bad debts ( less with some lenders , more with others ) .
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