Example sentences of "[pos pn] [adj] [noun sg] because it " in BNC.

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1 My favourite is a high-buttoned waistcoat in black , my favourite colour because it 's easy to match up .
2 For year-round interest , firs like Abies lasiocarpa appreciate heavy , moist soil , although A. koreana is my personal favourite because it produces cones at an early age .
3 ‘ I thought I would wear my thick coat because it might be cold waiting for the bus and it would stand up to the rain .
4 The US still wants its verbal support because it is cover for American policy in the Middle East , but that 's all it is .
5 The Treasury , moreover , suffered a setback in its endeavour to recover its pre-war importance because it had failed to predict the convertibility crisis .
6 He accepted that the introduction of a night sleeper was something which could n't be contemplated in their present accommodation because it would involve the carer sleeping in the same room as the plaintiff .
7 By 1966 , the Church was better able to take advantage of the new interest in its separatist stance because it now had a core of Ulstermen who had been converted under Ian Paisley s preaching and who had grown up with his politicized evangelicalism .
8 Harvard could implement sweeping changes in its medical curriculum because it had a forceful dean and access to large grants to fund a very ambitious project .
9 The trial succeeded in finding several organisational problems but did not achieve its secondary objective because it became clear that the breadth and depth of knowledge needed by the individuals were implicit in the experience needed to do the job and that the individual could work quicker and chop and change subject more easily than the expert system .
10 I admire them for being so up front about their religious activity because it puts them right in the front line against anti-Semitism . ’
11 The Templeton tracer study concluded that DGMs welcomed their new role because it offered ‘ more choice in what work is treated as a priority ’ and that , in spite of pressures and constraints , there was a greater flexibility in attitude in tackling these problems ( Stewart , 1989 ) .
12 Now in those circumstances , and I can think of a number of schools where that works very well , the governing body is a very powerful force , for links out from the school into the outside world , not only into business and industry , but also into the L E A , and it 's actually quite a lot of schools quite like to have a County Councillor on their governing body because it gives them an in to the L E A at a policy-making , or an individual decision-making level .
13 That student is unable to get help from his educational institution because it has run out of its access funds .
14 The adjudicative principle is our special interest because it provides a conception of law antagonistic to pragmatism .
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