Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [Wh det] happen to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The real problem is , as the Carnegie Foundation has realized since establishing the Ageing Society Project of the Carnegie Corporation of New York in 1982 ( Pifer and Bronte , 1986 ) , that we know surprisingly little about what happens to a society and its economy when its age structure changes significantly .
2 ‘ He told me a little about what happened to you in the States , ’ I encouraged .
3 ‘ I care too much about what happens to this family .
4 What was really wrong with Eldorado was that nobody really cared much about what happened to the characters .
5 They 're designed to take the heat out of the dispute by getting the husband and wife to talk sense rather than war , especially about what happens to the kids and the money .
6 If you refuse then I 'll go after him regardless of what happens to Mobuto .
7 Now a day 's residue is some association which relates the manifest content usually to what happened to you that day , and often i they 're very oft it 's often that the day 's residue is built into the manifest dream , so it 's quite obvious , you had this dream because of something that happened to you on that day .
8 ‘ And I reckon it was all tied up with what happened to my mother . ’
9 However , assuming it is , then we must look very carefully at what happened to your mother .
10 The number of those affected by poverty in any society will , however , be influenced not only by the level of unemployment , but also by what happens to the incomes of those on low pay .
11 ‘ It is now about five years since this all started and it has been quite stressful but I feel pretty strongly about what happened to me and my child and I am determined to see it through .
12 In contrast , the real-balance effect exerts a direct influence on the level of spending independently of what happens to the rate of interest .
13 She has found , though , that by writing so closely about what happened to her she has , in a way , lost some of her own past .
14 I wholly agree with the right hon. Member for Sparkbrook that it would be inappropriate to oppose the Bill on Second Reading , but , like the right hon. Gentleman , I intend to look closely at what happens to it during its passage through the House .
  Next page