Example sentences of "[Wh det] [adv] [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This approach contrasts with s35 of the TDA 1968 which expressly provides that failure to comply with that Act does not render any contract void or unenforceable .
2 This is achieved in Precedent 2 by the inclusion of cl 1.4 , which expressly protects these additional rights notwithstanding the specific remedies granted by cll 3.2 and 3.3 .
3 There is nothing in the Act of 1987 which expressly removes any part of that protection .
4 Under a quarter of respondents provided specific teaching , which rarely exceeded 30 minutes weekly .
5 Rather than being sustained by a vibrant , developing , experimental tradition , the revolutions of modernism may simply have been absorbed by an engrained , infrangible , realist tradition which rarely does more than appropriate a few of the more alluring additions Joyce and others made to ‘ the international store of literary technique ’ .
6 Full of stairs and small rooms on each floor and no garden to speak of , only a kind of paved area leading off the basement kitchen which rarely got any sun .
7 Whilst Julia Browne 's interviews with animal portrait artists , none of whom have felt the effects of the recession in the art world , gives us any insight into a very different world , a world which rarely attracts any notice from the serious art press .
8 Remember these routes are all on limestone , which rarely gives good routes at less than VS , but a line of bolts , ending at a firmly anchored chain , up dry and solid rock , means that a much bolder approach can be adopted than on the polished , easier routes of Stoney or the vertical scree of Swanage .
9 Is it not ironic that the Government are introducing the Bill at a time when virtually all the political parties — parties which rarely find common ground , as we have tragically and sadly witnessed over the years — see eye to eye in opposing the scheme ?
10 It relates more particularly to parish churches , which rarely have single-sex choirs in these days .
11 Responding to the needs of people who live on their own — and some 36 per cent of people over 65 do — could increase sales on many items , notably food items , which rarely attract single householders because the goods are currently only available in large , wasteful quantities unless they are convenience foods .
12 He then made several shorter runs , which thereby accumulated fewer neutrons and had correspondingly larger uncertainties .
13 Finally , probably the most decisive factor of all is whether both parties were properly advised legally , and equally skilled technically and commercially , so that they should have been capable of adequately assessing the risks and rewards they were undertaking in the transactions and of producing a contract document which properly reflected this .
14 Erm the other point of course , this is raised in matter B , as it 's written is it considered to be restrictive too restrictive er and third and secondly , is it giving you er guidance which properly reflects national guidance .
15 Of all the scenes in Peter Grimes this is the one which most reminds one of Britten 's
16 He got more and more entangled in committees of the ecumenical movement , which was on a rising tide of Christian hope , and which badly needed trained English academics to help .
17 POLICE and fire officers were last night still investigating the cause of a fire which badly damaged two car workshops in farm outbuildings .
18 During the 1930s he led the team which successfully decrypted all Comintern radio traffic with England , and by 1939 he was head of the military section at the Government Code and Cypher School .
19 At home he developed a system of close co-operation between management and trade union leaders which successfully improved economic performance and kept down unemployment .
20 It may therefore be that a clause which wholly negates one party 's promise will never be given effect ; even if this is not the case , the court will be extremely reluctant to interpret the clause in that way and clear words will be needed to have that effect .
21 Such changes in social and political thought clearly have important consequences for the character and goals of political action in the late twentieth century , and their effects are reinforced by the emergence of new problems and new movements — concerned with such issues as the environment and the use of natural resources , and the subordination of women — which arguably have little connection with class politics ; as well as by the renewed vigour of ethnic and national consciousness , expressed in independence movements of various kinds .
22 In the context of this paper it is very significant that of OECD 's 24 member states no less than 18 expressed strong interest in their proposal to identify educational policies which effectively support rural economic development .
23 About 1,200 members of the 1,400-strong central committee took part in the July 22 vote , which effectively delayed any party leadership contest at least until 1991 .
24 It is this logic of practice which effectively negates most research and is perhaps the main reason that between 1979 and 1988 , only one of the research papers I have compiled has been looked at by senior officers .
25 It is not without significance that it had its source in a campaign which effectively combined Cobdenite principles of free trade with a ‘ bellicose philanthropy ’ worthy of the most self-righteous of Victorian imperialists .
26 Notorious articles ( 141 , 142 and 163 ) of the penal code dating from the 1930s which effectively outlawed communist or fundamentalist opinion were abolished by the new legislation .
27 This year saw the introduction of new EEC legislation which effectively requires all petrol cars to be fitted with catalysts to clean up exhaust pollution .
28 which effectively determined this case in the courts below and it is the law as so stated which the appellant prosecutor now challenges as an unwarranted judicial gloss upon the statutory language , as opposed to a legitimate construction of it .
29 It is however I think relevant to the debate on policies I five and I twelve , to the extent that the County Council adjustments to the wording of policy I five which would provide for the distributional strategy and its emphasis on directing development to locations in and adjacent to main urban areas , main towns and small towns , to be modified so as to pe permit major employment allocations to be made elsewhere and indeed on a scale which effectively improved distributional strategy .
30 At the very heart of single capacity was the Stock Exchange 's rule-book which effectively blocked significant structural reform .
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