Example sentences of "[noun] whose [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Sad-Core may have reduced our status to the sick man of Europe amidst the flourishing electronic dance scenes in Germany , Belgium and Holland , but some excavation reveals an underground whose shockwaves get bigger every day .
2 He also pointed out in Committee , when we had no figures to put to him , that there are a very large number of second homes whose owners will effectively receive a 50 per cent .
3 It contains guidance on arrangements to transfer local authority residential care homes to independent control ; it also gives Directions from the Secretary of State for Health about local authorities ' continuing responsibility for residents in transferred homes whose care was arranged by the local authority under Section 21(1) of the National Assistance Act 1948 ( as amended by paragraph 2(1) , Schedule 23 to the Local Government Act 1972 ) and under paragraph 2 , Schedule 8 to the National Health Service Act 1977 .
4 An anti-Fascist march soon after the Cable Street incident was the occasion for Mosley 's supporters to go on the rampage in the Mile End Road , smashing the windows of shops whose owners were Jewish and inflicting injury at random .
5 The Gallery is known as Il salotto di Milano , the ‘ drawing room of Milan ’ , being the traditional meeting place of the Milanese , who use it at all times of day attracted by the city 's best cafés and restaurants , together with a range of fine shops whose windows are dressed by masters in the craft .
6 While we are on the subject of the amount paid in business rates , can the Minister tell us whether shops whose rates have been assessed on the basis of six-day or even five-and-a-half-day trading will have their rateable values reassessed on the basis of seven-day trading ?
7 On route you will have found plenty of cosy little cafes for a mid-morning coffee , cheerful pubs , and in the Bahnhofstrasse , confectionery shops whose wares are displayed with such imagination that it seems a sin to pass them by .
8 As the headmaster gave the Husayn twins what he called ‘ the cork-screw ’ — an intense stare combined with a slow quiver of the nostrils — they slackened their hold on the new recruit to Class 1 — a Bosnian refugee whose name no one could pronounce .
9 One of the reasons for the survival of the category is the survival of educational institutions defined by it : special schools and units whose purpose is to cater for MLD/ESN pupils .
10 There may appear to be an element of paradox in the notion of semantic relations between lexical units whose meanings , at least on the strong version of the contextual view , are partially constituted by those very relations .
11 This analogy represents the global political system as a vast billiard-table on which the actors , the nation-states , are the billiard-balls : self-contained sealed units whose interaction is limited to superficial clashes .
12 Below these are Planning Units whose heads have overall managerial responsibility for their Units and answer to the Provosts who , in turn , sit on the Central Management Group chaired by the Principal .
13 A detachment represents a body of troops that has been split off from the rest of their regiment and armed as small , independent units whose role is to operate within sight of their regiment .
14 For who within the service is seeking or is willing to dismantle these units whose power and autonomy has been growing in strides since the Royal Commission of 1960 and the subsequent Police Act of 1964 first created the amalgamated giants ?
15 As for embellishments , the people organising naming ceremonies seemed to be outnumbered by other policymakers whose desire was to see them progressively removed .
16 The key point , to repeat it , is that a parasite whose genes aspire to the same destiny as the genes of its host shares all the interests of its host and will eventually cease to act parasitically .
17 The first 100 readers whose postcards are drawn out of the bag on 12 December 1992 will each receive a special Le Piat d'Or Christmas Gift Box .
18 Readers whose memories were pleasurably tickled by our ‘ Oldies ’ article on Dave Hill 's Superyob guitar might be interested to know that John Birch is back in the guitar business after a ten-year absence .
19 Like Dean Acheson 's ‘ Present at the Creation ’ , which describes the cold war 's start , this book will remind readers whose memories may already be fading of some essential truths about America and world politics in the 20th century .
20 One wonders what thoughts this invites in the minds of those young readers whose parents are ‘ mere ’ bus drivers , nurses , sheep farmers , or school teachers .
21 Readers whose letters are published will receive one of our attractive The Artist binders .
22 Readers whose letters are published will receive one of our attractive The Artist binders .
23 The motion states : ‘ To recruit almost exclusively from the narrow minority group of Guardian readers whose views are predominantly leftwing is contrary to the spirit of the obligations of political balance in broadcasting and is an explanation of the self-righteous and unctuous hostility of broadcasters towards the present Government . ’
24 Readers whose stomachs are turned will not partake of any food for thought .
25 We have a 100ml sample size of Dry Skin Relief to give away absolutely free to the first 2500 readers whose names are drawn from the postbag .
26 We have 1000 bottles of Selsun Soft Conditioner to give away free to the first 1000 readers whose names and addresses are drawn from the postbag after October 31 1989 .
27 We have 20 copies to give away to the first 20 readers whose names are pulled out of the bag on July 9 1992 , send your name and address on an adhesive label to Business Executive Diaries Ltd , Cornerways , Brenchley Road , Brenchley , Tonbridge , Kent TN12 7PB .
28 They have 75 for the first readers whose names are pulled out of the bag on July 8 1992 to try .
29 BaByliss have ten BodyToner Plus worth £34.95 to giveaway to the readers whose names are pulled out of the bag on July 8 1992 .
30 GARDEN PLANTS FOR FREE The Gardener has 5 copies of Alan and Adrian Bloom 's Blooms of Bressingham Garden Plants to give away to the first five readers whose names are drawn from the postbag after 31 December 1992 .
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