Example sentences of "which [pron] [vb past] at [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The bedding which I observed at first hand in 1954 in the peasant community of Pul Eliya was nothing like as grand as the stereotype ; but , apart from some minor differences , it had all the same elements and for the most part they occurred in just the same sequence .
2 ‘ Ingested that from which she died at that meal ? ’
3 Then there are the Flume Rides ; long , twisty fibreglass tunnels , down which one slid at high speed , ending in a deep pool at the bottom .
4 But it 's on a hill in the , in the , in the , it 's a long way down from there to walk and , and if I remember rightly it was on the outside of the hotel , on a bank and that to me means that erm if we had had some weather , which we had at that time , then the roots could have suffered but the other clue I think is that erm it comes into leaf first and it drops its leaves first in the autumn so maybe it 's a different tree than the other , different variety , because there are several horse chestnuts are n't there ?
5 A decent interval elapsed , during which we looked at each other rather anxiously .
6 I filled a syringe with a " mixed macterin " which we used at that time against the secondary invaders of distemper .
7 She remembered how the table around which they sat at High Tea , was covered with a sheet of speckled grey lino which had a strange stickiness .
8 And yet the mundane circumference beyond which he stepped at such times was also necessary to him : it was the circle in which he could stand and be safe .
9 It was in the summer of 1932 that Duke paddled out alone into the biggest swell he had seen in his life , with a stiff offshore from the Koolau mountains pinning back the peaks , which he estimated at thirty feet , as big as the storm waves off Kaena Point .
10 Two other books which he wrote at this time were to cause him serious trouble .
11 With the benefit of a later viewpoint , aided not least by the opportunity to reflect on Bolinger 's own work , we would suggest that , in most cases , other answers are more appropriate than the ones which he offered at that time ( nevertheless , we return to this article more than once in the chapters which follow ) .
12 The Oxford lectures which he gave at this time were eventually to be published as The Discarded Image , perhaps the most completely satisfying and impressive book he ever published .
13 He was warned of at least 15 contacts in the Cranfield overhead by the Luton Approach controller and instructed to contact Cranfield by radio which he did at 1227:05 hrs , stating his altitude as 2000 feet .
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