Example sentences of "which we [modal v] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The claim is so shocking — a paradox and even a horror , which we may easily be lulled into taking too lightly — that only two views of this man are possible .
2 Instead of just the two states 1 and 0 , the information technology of living cells uses four states , which we may conventionally represent as A , T , C and G. There is very little difference , in principle , between a two-state binary information technology like ours , and a four-state information technology like that of the living cell .
3 The intellect merely helps us choose the means by which we may best achieve ends dictated by our instincts .
4 I think , I think I 'm actually seeking your approval then to spend additional thousand pounds from our balances for this safety work , which we may well be able to top up later in the discussion this evening .
5 Even the validity of many of the ‘ I 've been here before ’ experiences is rather doubtful as , with the growth of television and cinema , we have all seen so many places which we may later come to visit .
6 A further issue which we may also wish to consider is the one of ‘ value added ’ .
7 This transition can be accomplished in 29 branchings , which we may naively think of as a stately walk of 29 steps across genetic space .
8 Nevertheless , it is our purpose to keep a channel open by which we may still talk with Glendower . ’
9 Pioneering scientific work is now opening up the immense diversity of sensory worlds experienced by other creatures : extraordinary worlds which we may never be able to enter , but which we can at least start to appreciate through our awareness of animal " supersenses " .
10 Our days weave together the simple pleasures of daily life , which we should never take for granted , and the higher pleasures of Art and Thought which we may now taste as we please , with none to forbid or criticise .
11 So far as he was concerned , a great danger had been averted , and the matter was now closed , but it had a sequel which we may now follow .
12 That , that is certainly , you know , it , that can be , and , and it 's something which we 'll probably look at a wee longer term
13 So the distance makes something look rather fainter , and similarly if you have something like a particular kind of start that you can identify by some property — which we 'll perhaps talk about in a moment — if you can identify it and you know how bright it is , then the fainter ones are further away and you can estimate the distance by how faint they are .
14 Okay , we can now define certain pre-structural relations which we 'll then use to explain the behaviour of things like herself so it 's only over okay , and node X dominates a node Y right , where a node is the point where a label appears , sentence node , node and so on .
15 This was the difficult project of his own book , Orientalism ( 1978 ) , which we shall later be examining in detail .
16 By the thirteenth century such material makes a substantial penetration of vernacular literature , with important examples in texts which we shall later meet in connection with Chaucer 's fabliaux in The Romance of the Rose ( 8455ff. ) and Eustache Deschamps ' Miroir de Mariage , " Mirror of Marriage " .
17 The behaviour of NAIRU , which we shall also call the equilibrium unemployment rate , is itself path dependent .
18 But with one exception ( to which we shall soon return ) he does not ask such questions about the Romans .
19 There is sixteenth-century orthographic evidence , which we shall further discuss in chapter 5 , that suggests some distribution of low vowel realizations for /Ε/; in London English of the period : it seems possible that this pattern of lowering of historic short vowels has been overtaken in recent standard English and Central Scots by a pattern of raising and ( in the latter case ) lengthening .
20 I urge the assembly to accept this amendment to depart from this statement , to commend to our churches the use of the apostle 's creed and to wait for a day of broad theological agreement which in the providence of God and by the work of the holy spirit will surely come and then agree upon a statement of faith which we shall all agree and be able to commend enthusiastically to the church but until then to depart from this one .
21 This is a situation where the rate of growth ( by which we shall always mean the proportionate growth ) of all relevant magnitudes remains constant over time .
22 Probably you do not care enough for it to create a liking and a need , which we shall never be able to satisfy nevertheless , avoid it unless principle and pleasure and interest all advise it .
23 Nevertheless , the four categories enable us to identify common features of some of the different types of documents which we shall now consider in detail .
24 But maybe these reactions are merely irrational vindictive emotions ( akin to vengeance ) which we ought morally to curb rather than indulge .
25 A fair voting system , which we would also like to see in local government , would mean that it would be unlikely that there would ever be extremist Labour councils .
26 which , which we would just have
27 The causal chain between stimulus and response had a kind of inevitability , an independence from processes which we would normally regard as mental : it by-passed our knowledge of the friend 's personality , history , and basic assumptions about human motivation , the orderliness of conduct , and so forth .
28 But Fodor goes on to argue that much of what can be said about reflexes can also be said about processes which we would normally regard as ‘ cognitive ’ rather than ‘ neurological ’ or ‘ behavioural ’ : the parsing of heard sentences , for example .
29 The proscription is , of course , a legal convention which we would normally take for granted , but is , in this context , inconsistent with the SI anti-copyright policy and , in the light of the Lautréamont axiom : ‘ Plagiarism is necessary — progress implies it , ’ which Francis cites on page 19 , is an unintended irony .
30 which we would normally subject the claims of political leaders to .
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