Example sentences of "[noun sg] which [modal v] be found " in BNC.
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1 | His work led to the celebrated equation which bears his name , an equation which can be found written down at the start of every book on quantum mechanics . |
2 | The collective experience of twelve arbitrarily chosen people is assumed to provide a degree of familiarity with popular reading trends , with what is deemed acceptable on television and at cinemas , and with the degree of explicitness which can be found in publications on sale at local newsagents . |
3 | Initially at any rate , it is best to choose packs that contain the types of component which can be found in practically every project . |
4 | Before attempting to describe the various approaches to learning and teaching which may be found in the contemporary primary school , it would be appropriate to list in the broadest of terms the key elements which lie at the heart of the curriculum . |
5 | It was an attitude of mind which had existed long before the sixteenth century ; the great change was that an attitude which could be found in a number of separate societies was suddenly turned by the expansion of Europe into a force that altered the way that the whole world ran its affairs . |
6 | It is less easy to reconcile the " pervasive " approach with a more general and subtle type of stylistic shift which must be found , to some extent , in every novel . |
7 | An insight into the relationship which may be found between technology and cultural form in such societies is offered by the argument formulated by Franz Boas ( 1955 ) concerning the origins of primitive art ( see also Gombrich 1979 ) . |
8 | To begin with , the Cretan vases were made out of chlorite or chlorite schist , but the vase makers soon branched out into other materials , favouring especially the relatively soft and easily worked serpentine which can be found in various parts of central and eastern Crete . |
9 | The historical development which can be found in any long-established library also goes . |
10 | At the same time these avenues depend for their inspiration on a more abstract set of values of community and democracy which can be found in political theory . |
11 | This is a traditional , well-established hotel and is ideal for those who wish to be close to the town 's many amenities — shops , restaurants and sights — and yet seek the peace and tranquillity which can be found in the hotel 's beautiful gardens . |
12 | The adjective beautiful , for example , denotes a quality which can be found in many different objects and therefore does not by itself indicate the nature of that about which it is said . |
13 | If they were not , then , as we saw in the echoes of this theory which can be found in Hobbes 's resolutio-compositive method , the proper order of demonstration would have been reversed . |
14 | Another famous goby is the Mudskipper Periophthalmus barbarus which can be found ‘ walking ’ around on the mud of African , Asian and Australian estuaries . |
15 | Where the Act does apply it seeks to regulate all the different types of exclusion clause which may be found in a contract . |
16 | The name actually means ‘ God is comfort ’ , or ‘ comfort of God ’ — a word which will be found to have high and particular meaning for Leonard , and for those touched by his perceptions . |
17 | Consequently , they might make a significant contribution to the development of computer-aided instructional materials and delivery systems for machine-readable information which will be found increasingly in the commercial as well as in the academic worlds . |
18 | Precedent 1 is a typical set of standard conditions of sale which would be found upon the back of a seller 's quotation , and cl 1 adopts this approach . |
19 | In spite of its small size , England possesses rich evidence of its history which can be found extensively throughout the country . |
20 | Whatever the particular context of such changes , these studies demonstrate that a set of transformations in material culture which may be found to permeate almost every trivial domain , from chimneys to rubbish disposal , can be understood as a largely unconscious and unintentional response by a variety of social groups , which produced new forms of demand and new means of incorporating the emergence of mass produced items . |
21 | Of a wisdom which can be found in the smallest gleam , as well as in the fiercest blaze of light . |