Example sentences of "[noun pl] because it [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The social world must be seen through the actors ' eyes because it depends on how they see it and it works in whatever way social capacities are exercised .
2 Braille is a particularly useful tool for probing predictions from different models because it depends on fine discrimination of raised dot patterns , and a rule system of contractions .
3 Wordsworth produced quantities of verse in the next forty-three years : I stress the exact number of years because it amounts to over half his lifetime , and certainly to two-thirds of his poetic existence .
4 Miss Bowes said : ‘ There has been an upward trend in rates in the last few weeks because it looked like Labour were going to win .
5 Finally , Bennett 's study is a step forward from previous studies because it differentiates between general secondary education and vocational secondary education .
6 According to Mr Hagger the company has lost many thousands of pounds because it paid for a loan that was not forthcoming .
7 An alternative view is that s.64 is restricted to explosives because it falls within the part of the Act dealing with explosives .
8 Some parents will be very upset , in some cases because it cuts across their genuine convictions .
9 There was no way we could put TI money into the company , we could n't justify doing that to the shareholders because it looked to us as though BA was going to go under .
10 Would he tell us then what he believes the impact of the er pay settlements will have on the spending he 's allowed local authorities because it seems to me there must either be a cut in staff er and a cut in services if they 're gon na keep within the the money that he made available at the time when he was n't aware of these settlements .
11 Are individual Japanese so decidedly group orientated by cultural tradition or is it that ‘ in many cases they are loyal to their groups because it pays to be loyal ’ ( Befu 1977 p. 87 ) ?
12 As a Rastafarian , he has an insider 's knowledge of the language , though many of his claims would not be accepted by linguists : for example , " as a language Afro-Lingua [ Rastafarian Creole ] does not need grammar and rules because it relies on improvisation , quickwittedness and skill at manipulating words " ( 1986a : 49 ) .
13 This sample looks like stripes because it includes at least two examples but this idea can be used between large areas of colour to merge the colour change edges .
14 The first is problematic in the light of the theory that living organisms ‘ see ’ with their eyes ; the second was problematic for the supporters of Galileo 's theories because it clashed with the ‘ force of a vacuum ’ theory accepted by them as an explanation of why the mercury does not fall from a barometer tube ; the third was problematic for Roentgen because it was tacitly assumed at the time that no radiation or emanation of any kind existed that could penetrate the container of the photographic plates and darken them ; the fourth was problematic because it was incompatible with Newton 's theory .
15 Virtually what it did it came out of the last parish council 's conference which I attended on your behalf and er the Director of Planning and Development , Colin promised to lay on a seminar for parish councillors because it seems to be the one service which always gets criticism at the parish council 's conference .
16 I trust , I trust that if there 's going to be any question of names coming forward to be a approved locally , not selected , I hope not selected , that they will be er they 'll come from the local level at which the police authority actually functions and not from other counties without that particular area and so My Lords , I would suggest er that er the best step to go for is er Lord MacIntosh 's Amendment Number Five and his er supplements and I would suggest My Lords that Amendment Number Twenty is resisted by your Lordships because it talks about one half of the members shall be members of a relevant council and I suggest above all My Lords that Amendment Number Twenty Seven is cast into outer darkness .
17 Similarly , lawyers can waste an enormous amount of time on irrelevant issues because it seems to them that certain trivial points ought to be important .
18 The sun is just a star , one of many thousands of millions of stars in our own galaxy , which is the milky way , which we see as we look up in the sky on a very dark night , and it was called the milky way by the ancients because it looked like a splash of milk across the sky , but we now know that it 's a flattened system consisting of these thousands of millions of stars .
19 Women were the ‘ conscience of the world ’ , social reform concerned women because it touched on ‘ all the great trusts of womanhood , the sanctity of the family , the purity of marriage , the sacredness of marriage , the sweet innocence of children ’ .
20 The case has direct relevance for the role of records managers and archivists because it focused on the role and responsibility of the U.S. Archivist in implementing organisational policy regarding electronic messages .
  Next page