Example sentences of "[noun pl] [conj] because [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He played a vital role because the Lords were central to Unionist tactics and because the only alternative leaders there — Selborne or Curzon — had each alienated some Unionist peers by their actions in 1911 .
2 As the same alanine and glycine codons are present at these positions in both human and bovine cDNA sequences and because the human gene , where analysed ( data not shown ) , has the same intron/exon boundaries , we suggest that these conclusions are applicable to the GGF gene structure and to the mRNA splicing patterns in both species .
3 [ 1 ] Here the problem is magnified hugely not only because there are no words but because the behavioural repertoire of the newborn is very limited .
4 They were then at even higher risk for teenage pregnancy and marrying for a negative reason ( i.e. to escape stressful circumstances or because an unwanted marriage was forced by pregnancy ) .
5 Translating language meanings and obtaining the desired effect , i.e. a wording immediately intelligible to listeners , is impossible , not because there are doubts as to the intended meaning of words or phrases but because the resulting translation of such words and phrases would fail to carry sense adequately in the other language .
6 This versatile gas powered styler heats up in minutes and because The Civil Aviation Authority has O.K. 'd it in checked-in luggage on aeroplanes , you really can style your hair anywhere you like !
7 In practice however it would appear that PGCE courses do resemble each other in many significant ways , no doubt because they have the same ultimate purposes and because the limited time available enforces a focus on fundamental issues leaving little opportunity for additional , idiosyncratic areas of study .
8 In Reconstruction , published in 1933 , Harold Macmillan wrote , ' ’ Planning ’ is forced upon us … not for idealistic reasons but because the old mechanism which served us when markets were expanding naturally and spontaneously is no longer adequate when the tendency is in the opposite direction' .
9 The number of shock wave discharges administered per session was limited to 3000 , based on experimental studies and because a higher number of discharges leads to clouding of the gall bladder with resultant suboptimal ultrasonographic visualisation caused by cavitation and fragmentation effects ( cloud of dust phenomenon ) .
10 The change in hours may compound an underlying increase in the number of claims , either because of increasing demand by patients or because the higher fee might encourage doctors to visit when previously they offered advice by telephone .
11 At the same time unusual changes were taking place in the late 1970s and in the 1980s because of the drop in pupil numbers and because an increasing number of interested parties were identifying themselves as appropriate new participants in its management ( Bogdanor 1979 ) .
12 Liberal democracy benefits capitalism not because capitalists control workers ' minds but because the industrial proletariat have rarely been a majority and are a now shrinking minority in advanced capitalist societies .
13 It is understandable that leases of premises in shopping centres may contain restrictions on the opening hours of the premises either because of centralised heating and other services or because the main gates to the centre , or to the servicing facilities , are closed .
14 The first factor is important in that it brings some applications within the database world ( for example , computer aided design , computer aided manufacture , architectural design , software design ( Case ) and office automation ) , previously ill-served by relational databases because of the performance of relational database systems and because the relational model itself is unsuitable For those domains .
15 Heating probably begins at quite shallow depths but because the downgoing plate is cold virtually all of this heat is initially absorbed .
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