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

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1 It was this reputation that attracted Stanley Pons to Southampton in 1975 , and it was Pons ' passion for skiing and his interest in cooking which overlapped so well with Fleischmann 's and brought the two men close .
2 An additional feature of the Goldstar step ladder is the useful tool tray which fits neatly on to the handrail , making a place for tools to be kept within easy reach .
3 This last point is a familiar one , which fits in well with the remarks on observing patterns that I have discussed above .
4 Ian Bird , director , said : ‘ There are six major operations and three small units , a portfolio which fits in well with our company strategy .
5 It is a solution which fits in neatly with Mr Lech Walesa 's suggestion that the future political make-up of Poland may be neither capitalist nor socialist .
6 King Lear is a play which fits in perfectly with contemporary society in its portrayal of family tragedy .
7 Thankfully , 1992 has brought forth a rejuvenated Stray Cats , and a new LP which delves still further into their rockabilly roots .
8 Some of the smaller ones which concentrate very largely on teacher education , which is to be subject to substantial reductions , look particularly vulnerable .
9 The results of such changes are institutions which concentrate very largely on advanced vocational and general courses .
10 These peaks were consistent with the existence of a local fivefold rotation axis and also provided a calculated self-rotation function which agreed very well with the observed self-rotation function .
11 Denudation chronology also produced a number of debates which centred not only on the existence of surfaces of a particular number , which was not readily resolved by trend surface analysis , but also on the mode of development of planation surfaces and the significance of earth movement in influencing the denudation chronology .
12 Walk on round to those cliffs and you come to what seem like utterly derelict sheds hanging on the edge of the precipice , stinking of goat : these are stacked with piles of skins for tanning , which goes on below in Brobdingnagian wooden barrels and enormous concrete troughs .
13 This continues until there is a well-developed inward bulge which goes about half-way across the interior .
14 One should not overlook the desirability of having the railway line , which goes fairly directly to the station on a Regional Railways route and one should not overlook the importance of having a radial road which does not go through or otherwise influence villages between it and the centre of York .
15 Company 's such as Campeau , which plunged too deeply into debt when it bought Bloomingdale 's , will no longer be able to count on the US taxpayer to bail them out .
16 Each country with a sailing history has its own version which differs only slightly from that of others .
17 However , crime has been displaced recently at the centre of race politics by another issue which points equally effectively to the incompatibility of different cultures supposedly sealed off from one another forever along ethnic lines .
18 A sign to Venezuela which points somewhat desperately towards an empty plot at dawn proudly signals the completed metal pavilion only 13 hours later .
19 And so it was that he gained his passport to that respectability which lay so easily on his shoulders by the time his picture was painted : he would be apprenticed .
20 She dressed soberly , changed her clothes less often , coiled her long dark hair into its usual long glossy package which lay so neatly upon her neck .
21 She was grateful not only to be with her aunt and uncle in that last year , but to be near Ernest and Charlotte so that they could discuss , usually when the older couple had gone to bed , the life which lay so tantalisingly before them .
22 The same point applies to Tillich 's definition of religion as Ultimate Concern which refers not simply to man 's subjective concern , that is , the expression of his Ultimate Concern , but what he is ultimately concerned about , or that which is the source of his concern .
23 The photon-correlation experiment utilises two such switches , which change randomly relatively to each other , with a switching time of 10 nanoseconds ( 10 thousand-millionths of a second ) .
24 Therefore it was supposed that payments practices , and other institutional arrangements which change only slowly over time , have more influence on the velocity of circulation than any temporary changes in M. Before the First World War there may have been a good deal of truth in this assumption because the financial system was relatively unsophisticated and financial innovation was taking place very slowly by today 's standards .
25 ‘ And it was , in my view , the lack of sufficiently rigorous and enquiring approach which led not only to the failure to appreciate that there was a Jersey partnership but also to some other of the faults I have identified . ’
26 ‘ It was , in my view , the lack of a sufficiently rigorous and enquiring approach which led not only to the failure to appreciate that there was a Jersey partnership but also to some others of the faults I have identified . ’
27 They pushed their way through the morning crowd : monks , friars , hucksters and pedlars , ignoring the shouts and screams of the city as they turned into Fish Hill Street which led down on to London Bridge .
28 At the door which led back on to the landing he was looking around for a prop or a wedge to pin it open when he thought of the parcel that he 'd been hugging since the zoo .
29 The captain of the guard outside St Bartholomew 's let us through and we went under the darkened archway and up some steps into the chamber which led out on to the balcony .
30 An introductory note says that she used to read prayers very slowly with frequent pauses , which led almost instantaneously to prayer .
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