Example sentences of "which have traditionally [verb] " in BNC.

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1 This will mean a change in the balance of their work which has traditionally involved planning and delivering INSET and curriculum development with advisory teachers and others , often based in teachers ' centres rather than schools .
2 Again , while the idea that officials exercising delegated authority should be directly accountable to Parliament may seem logical , it ignores the political reality of government domination which has traditionally characterized executive/legislative relationships in Britain .
3 Cray Research Inc. in Minnesota , which has traditionally asked university scientists in the United States to help it to develop software , hopes to work with European scientists to develop specific software .
4 Nor has the Labour Party , which has traditionally kept its own counsel on ‘ law-and-order ’ matters , proved entirely immune to the surrounding clamour .
5 As a result of the secrecy which has traditionally surrounded donor insemination there is an almost complete lack of knowledge of how donor assisted families fare as the children grow up .
6 It is this epoch which has traditionally marked for pupils a break from learning about royalty and politicians to noting the dates of inventions such as the spinning jenny and Arkwright 's mule .
7 To illustrate more clearly what is meant by structural unemployment , consider a region within a country which has traditionally specialised in ship-building .
8 But in that credo the dogma that the culture and the nature of man are sharply and easily distinguishable , which has traditionally held a central position in the teaching of both cultural and social anthropology , has no part .
9 Jobs , particularly in areas such as the construction industry , which has traditionally attracted Northern Irish workers , are no longer plentiful .
10 The decline in mortality rates , which had traditionally cut off marriage after about twenty years , was not yet offset by rising divorce rates .
11 In his acceptance speech he called on delegates to work to overcome the rivalries which had traditionally split the country 's communist movement and invited " all left-oriented people " to join the new party .
12 That proposal had perished in the face of determined opposition from the Social Democratic Party of Japan ( SDPJ ) which was vehemently opposed to any symptom of incipient Japanese militarism , and which had traditionally disputed the constitutional legitimacy of the very existence of the SDF .
13 The General Confederation of Labour ( Confederación General del Trabajo — CGT ) , which had traditionally formed the power base of Peronism , was split broadly into those for and those against the secretary-general , Saúl Ubaldini , who regarded the government 's economic policies as a betrayal of Peronism .
14 But why was an in itself not implausible view held with a passionate , indeed a pathological , extremism which contrasted so notably ( as Bernard Shaw was to observe with his usual wit ) with the ideal of moderation and the juste milieu which had traditionally defined middle-class social ambitions and roles ?
15 Observers noted that this was the first time that France , which had traditionally followed a strongly independent defence policy , had suggested such a possibility .
16 Increased expenditure on criminal legal aid made advocacy economically attractive to those firms which had traditionally ignored this down-market branch of legal practice .
17 Put into the social context of the late Middle Ages this meant that the class which had traditionally provided the leadership of armies was having its position , founded largely on social factors , questioned if not undermined .
18 Henry 's anti-papalism was based on the belief that the pope had wrongfully usurped the spiritual and temporal power which had traditionally belonged to the kings of England , and while he therefore rejected the pope 's claim to jurisdiction in England , he was prepared to regard him as the rightful Bishop of Rome .
19 All three major candidates agreed that the influence of the country 's chaebols — large business conglomerates which had traditionally worked closely with the government — should be curbed and a greater emphasis placed upon laissez-faire economics .
20 In particular , this will show whether greater proximity has broken down some of the barriers which have traditionally existed between the two groups or , as some theorists have suggested , has led to a re-definition of their differences .
21 Unfortunately , they are doing so alongside all the inherited pseudo-science and woolly thinking , the pretentious massing of obscure and unreliable ( and unreliably dated ) data which have traditionally marked Velokovskianism off from more orthodox science .
22 The Montagne is dotted with small lignite mines , many deserted , which have traditionally supplied the Champagne grower .
23 Siemens in turn is ( along with Ericsson and ITT ) one of three companies which have traditionally supplied telecommunications equipment on a favoured , semi-sheltered , basis in many national markets .
24 Sylvanus is seen partly as a threat to sexual virtue , partly as a threat to social and economic structures which have traditionally guaranteed certain rights and freedoms to agricultural workers .
25 The Ministry of Agriculture , which is responsible for Britain 's coastal defences , is considering a major rethink in policy , shifting the emphasis away from technological solutions toward more natural solutions involving the revival of salt marshes , which have traditionally protected coastlines .
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