Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [adv] because it " in BNC.

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1 I mean you ca n't put that settee here because it it blocks that door .
2 ‘ It took an awful lot of my powers as Chairman of Academic Review and Resources Committee to steer that course through because it did mean a lot of resource implications that were n't obvious at the beginning .
3 If in a subsequent Act Parliament chooses to make it plain that the earlier statute is being to some extent repealed , effect must be given to that intention just because it is the will of the Legislature .
4 But Mexico got this support only because it had sorted out its economy .
5 And the third tells you that it was Isaac Newton who wrote this equation down because it matched what happened every time he played billiards or threw apples around .
6 They have been placed at the head of this chapter only because it is the extreme case which so often bothers the social worker in consideration of what he or she might be involved in if the sexual side of the work develops .
7 The bloody Hun-lovers were trying to blow this club up because it represents all that is best about England . ’
8 However , by focusing exclusively on girls , researchers have ignored the important premise that gender has any cultural meaning only because it is based on difference ( Hollway 1982 ) .
9 NT will not be fractured into a bunch of different versions simply because it 's run on different microprocessors .
10 NT will not be fractured into a bunch of different versions simply because it 's run on different MPUs .
11 My reason for not having done it myself and my father 's reasons for not having done it with the National Gallery is that , in the case of Yale , I 'm looking forward to the day when there 'll be other people interested in English art who will give paintings or money to the Center for British Art just because it is the Center for British Art , where they would n't do it if it was the Paul Mellon Center for British Art .
12 Like its author , this is a book which insists you forgive it every one of its manifest faults simply because it presumes to be no other than it is .
13 Engineers often introduce into factories new electronic machinery not because it is better than the old methods but to give management the upper hand over the workers
14 The honorary legal adviser to the Nationwide Festival of Light had criticised the deprave-and-corrupt test in The Daily Telegraph precisely because it had been so applied , arguing , in a plain man 's version of Lord Denning , that
15 And it ca n't by definition be about sexual liberation simply because it duplicates and exploits those same power relationships . ’
16 in as ah , well , yes , that 's an interesting thing actually because it 's not clear that the people sleeping on the streets in London belong to any class .
17 Do they exclude some information either because it is inappropriate here ( e.g. the sequence ) or excessively detailed ( e.g. the scale of the reaction in 1850 ) ?
18 ‘ They have no desire to investigate this matter properly because it could prove to have serious ramifications for a number of political parties and senior individuals , ’ he claimed .
19 I think we need to , for th this time round because it 'll soon get , you know
20 Will the Secretary of State answer that question truthfully because it strikes at the very heart of democracy ?
21 But why do n't you allow them to run a similar course there because it would mean more student members
22 Eastman Kodak put Interactive on the block at least six months ago because it did not fit its core business interests .
23 And I cleared the lot except six baskets and they were all in good condition , so I was glad of these six baskets really because it helped you to give them one or two more .
24 Kenny Everett said : ‘ I stopped watching 10 years ago because it was hideously irritating .
25 Constitutional authorities are critical of the established constitution precisely because it has somehow allowed , and not limited , the emergence of the pattern of party politics and state intervention which they regard as so disastrous for Britain and her economy .
26 Poetic speech does not differ from ordinary speech just because it may include constructions or vocabulary not found in everyday language ( the lo ! s thous and word-order inversions conventionally allowed in English poetry ) , but because its formal devices ( such as rhyme and rhythm ) act on ordinary words to renew our perception of them , and of their sound texture in particular .
27 Their work is relevant to us and speaks of the human condition not because it attains universality and ‘ objectivity ’ , as Goody and others would imply , but on the contrary precisely because of its articulation with the real social experience in which they participated .
28 National rivalries were all the more intense and confused in these districts precisely because it was often not possible to tell who was which nationality , or where a person 's loyalties lay .
29 It is dangerous , however , to argue that there is no reason for the large antlers just because it seems unnecessary to give a reason .
30 Moreover , as specialized professionals , medics warmed to an ideology of national efficiency precisely because it privileged rational experts over those generalist administrators who had earlier curbed the power of the Simonian specialist .
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