Example sentences of "which [is] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | I think we 've , being a target , we 've lived in which is since nineteen seventy three , I think we 've had about three break ins . |
2 | Surveys are however different from tests in their objective : a test is usually carried out to find out about an individual , a survey is carried out to find out about an issue which is across people . |
3 | For instance , if you speak about one you love who has betrayed you , you are afraid that if you shut the door on that person they will never come back and find the love which is between you both . |
4 | The plane on which the two waves collide is given by , or by which is between the two horizons . |
5 | If a university takes further students , as nearly all have , they receive only the student fee , which is between £800 and £2500 less . |
6 | 1a identify the place value of a column or a digit in it for values of units , tens , hundreds and thousands ; 1b represent in numerals a whole number given in words ; 1c represent in words a whole number given in numerals ; 1d order whole numbers ; 1e provide a whole number which is between two given numbers in size ; 1f represent a given whole number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ; 1g demonstrate understanding of relationships of the form 13 x 8 ( 10 x 8 ) + ( 3 x 8 ) . |
7 | The pupil can provide a whole number which is between two given numbers in size ( Example 80 ) . |
8 | 2a The pupil can identify the place value of a column or a digit in it for values of tenths , hundredths and thousandths ; 2b the pupil can represent in numerals a decimal number given in words ; 2c the pupil can represent in words a decimal number given in numerals ; 2d the pupil can order decimal numbers ; 2e the pupil can provide a decimal number which is between two given numbers in size ; 2f the pupil can represent a given decimal number on a number line or read one from a number line or scale ; 2g the pupil can understand relationships of the form 1.3 x 8 ( I x 8 ) + ( 0.3 x 8 ) ; 2h the pupil can represent a fraction in tenths or hundredths as a decimal ; 2i the pupil can represent a decimal with not more than two decimal places as a fraction . |
9 | The pupil can provide a decimal number which is between two given numbers in size ( Example 88 ) . |
10 | We fix , once and for all , two numbers : C , the value of a reward , which is any positive number , and K which is between 0 and 1 . |
11 | At 17 miles 2 chains , which is between the railway bridge over the Onny and the stone overbridge , known to the BCR as Longville Bridge , he required a screen 8 feet high and 80 yards long , on the north side of the line . |
12 | Now just specify the variables that you want in this regression , right , your dependent variable first okay when you 've specified the equation , sorry once you specify the equation press the end key which is between the alphabetic and the numeric key pads , that will then submit that request , right . |
13 | Usually , a pavement is enclosed by a border which is between 0.5 and 1.0 m. wide , and composed of larger tesserae . |
14 | He said : ‘ A contact I made when I was in Croatia got in touch to tell me about the efforts of the villagers of Sumet , which is between Split and Mostar . |
15 | And there was another one which affected the road , again the same road but north of Wych Cross , at Bramble Tie , which is between Forest Row and East Grinstead . |
16 | I am a member of a multi-disciplinary group which is considering undertaking an audit of children with learning difficulties who have challenging behaviour . |
17 | This is a good Scots which is at once distinctly literary and faithful to the speech of the city . |
18 | Kermode sees this change — which is at the heart of what I am writing about — as having radical implications for letters , comparable to such things as the advent , first of printing and then of cheap paper ; the bourgeoisie 's greater leisure for private reading ; and the abandonment by circulating libraries of the three-volume novel , which had been the favoured vehicle for fiction during much of the nineteenth century : Kermode exaggerates a little , I think ; nothing in the establishment of university English is as important as the innovations in culture and technology which established the book in its modern form . |
19 | ‘ I want to tell you fellas , if you are at risk ( from nuclear contamination ) it 's your semen and sperm which is at risk . ’ |
20 | His argument deploys the old jargon of authenticity , now combined with the jargon of otherness ; despite his Hegelian framework , Scruton deploys this jargon as an exalted metaphor which does little more than bestow a spurious profundity on a normative sexual politics which is at heart timid , conservative , and deeply ignorant . |
21 | Neither : let us say rather that what is most significant about such passages is the way so much is fantasized from the position of the woman ( including anal ecstasy and , elsewhere , Lawrence 's almost as notorious worship of the phallus ) , and in a voice which is at once blindingly heterosexist and desperately homoerotic . |
22 | It is a reply which is at once deferential and contemptuous , self-effacing and arrogant . |
23 | The exception is David Marquand 's splendid biography of Ramsay MacDonald , which is at its best when dealing with 1931 . |
24 | The first two tasks , though hideously difficult , were at least relatively straightforward ; the third posed the problem which is at the heart of Peter Dennis 's book : whose law was to be restored and what civilian authority should take over ? |
25 | Developments in Tanzania in the mid 1970s were , however , to end in the direct contradiction of this injunction , a contradiction which is at the heart of Tanzania 's tendency towards an authoritarian state . |
26 | There was a man born among these Jews who claimed to be , or to be the son of , or to be one with the something which is at once the awful haunter of Nature and the giver of the moral law . |
27 | The invitation is for the service only ( which is at 12 noon ) , since the numbers at the reception are limited by both space and budget . |
28 | The main events are at 12.25 ( women ) and 1.30 ( men ) in a day 's programme comprising 12 races , the first of which is at 11.05 . |
29 | Unwisely , as it turns out , the credits display the real thing , which is at least a dozen times better than this carelessly silly concoction . |
30 | But these are all secondary to the flow of talk , which is at times brilliant and , rather less often , impossibly pretentious . |