Example sentences of "whose [noun pl] are to [be] " in BNC.

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1 A lovely villa , set in beautiful gardens amidst vineyards it was once the home of the della Robbias , the family of renaissance artists , famous for their glazed ‘ terracotta ’ work , and whose masterpieces are to be admired all over Florence 's churches and galleries — most notably the lovely cherubs which grace the foundling hospital in Piazza della Santissima Annunziata .
2 So the question of whose goals are to be regarded as those of the organization can not be avoided .
3 The limited category of members of Parliament whose statements are to be admissible under the rule derives from Lord Browne-Wilkinson 's belief that ‘ in the case of statements made in Parliament , as at present advised I can not foresee that any statement other than the statement of the minister or other promoter of the Bill is likely to meet these criteria ’ .
4 The name of the LIFESPAN user whose packages are to be viewed .
5 The addressing mode fields ( one per operand ) each specify an accumulator ( or none ) whose contents are to be added to the appropriate operand ( or " displacement " ) field to generate an effective address .
6 Such an " increment count and jump " instruction specifies an accumulator , index register , or store location whose contents are to be used as a loop counter ( and which will have been initialized by another instruction ) .
7 Directory to be Checked The directory whose contents are to be compared with LIFESPAN held modules ; for a directory structure the directory path should be followed by three dots e.g. dua2 : [ mydir … ] .
8 ( 2 ) The Director may by notice in writing require the person whose affairs are to be investigated ( ‘ the person under investigation ’ ) or any other person whom he has reason to believe has relevant information to answer questions or otherwise furnish information with respect to any matter relevant to the investigation at a specified place and either at a specified time or forthwith .
9 ( 1 ) To require the person whose affairs are to be investigated to answer questions and furnish information with respect to any matter relevant to the investigation .
10 ( 2 ) To require the person whose affairs are to be investigated ( a ) to produce documents appearing to relate to any matter relevant to the investigation , or account for their absence , and ( b ) to provide an explanation for any such document .
11 The only feasible ground , as a matter of language , for contending that the right to ask questions and demand answers comes to an end upon charging is that the suspect is no longer a person whose affairs are to be investigated so that there can no longer be ‘ any matter relevant to the investigation . ’
12 The men whose stories are to be told are : — 1 ) .
13 The first step is to choose the appropriate collection ( or ‘ basket ’ ) of goods and services whose prices are to be included in the calculation .
14 Behind this privileging of popular culture lies not only an identification with the oppressed masses , but also a sense that Latin-American reality is radically different from that of the developed , industrial West , as well as a search for an identity whose roots are to be found in Latin America itself .
15 Only the company whose shares are to be suspended can make the application .
16 A legal code in Latin , among whose clauses are to be found royal edicts , can have been compiled only with the help of Roman lawyers .
17 Finally , when picking the base categories for several variables whose interrelationships are to be examined , an attempt should be made to keep negative relationships between variables to a minimum : double negatives are as confusing in data analysis as they are in prose .
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