Example sentences of "they also [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 And the Democrats among them also know that if they went on record against a war that turned out to be a great victory , President Bush would be even harder to beat in 1992 .
2 Both of them also help when the store is busy , which includes lunch hour between twelve and two o'clock .
3 Of course , they may have got him wrong , since some of them also suggested that the great man had once possessed a robust sense of humour .
4 Of course , they agreed , and if afterwards both of them also agreed that there was more to Sally-Anne 's story than she had cared to tell them , about both Havvie and the mysterious Dr Neil — they had noticed that his name was constantly on her lips — they did not tell her what they had guessed .
5 Broadly expressed , variable analysis is the disposition to see and describe social life as a collection of variables which , potentially , can be quantified and the relationships between them also measured and described in quantitative terms .
6 They also believed that other countries were overtaking Britain in every way ; , and of course , as in the 1950s and 1960s , the fallacy of a ‘ declining share ’ of world trade etc. was easy to convey and difficult to expose .
7 In common with most readers they expected poetry to deal with elegant , or at any rate , elevated topics ; they also believed that there was a special language for poetry which was quite different from the language of prose — and certainly far removed from that of daily conversation .
8 They also claim that the players have ‘ earned ’ this protection by the performances in the rest of the year which have brought about their rankings .
9 They also claim that these discontinuities were aggravated by the more frequent turnover of party control in the government in the 1970s and the influence exercised in both parties by its more partisan groups .
10 They also claim that fluoride potentially causes birth defects .
11 They also claim that poverty is not alleviated by providing ever-increasing welfare benefits , but rather by providing an appropriate economic and social environment , in which individuals have the incentive and the ability to raise themselves out of poverty , without encountering the poverty or unemployment traps .
12 They also claim that forgiveness produces reconciliation only when it is preceded by repentance .
13 They also claim that the Lord Cardinal has hired a famous witch , a murderess named Mabel Brigge , who has King Henry in thrall through the St Trinian 's fast , a three-day period of abstinence from food and drink which leaves the strongest subjects under her control . ’
14 They also claim that by bringing out a similar model , the XJR15 Jaguar failed to keep its supercar exclusive .
15 They also smoked and drank more .
16 Because the techniques involved imply a separate implementation of the portability software on each different platform — they also mean that what users purchase and what they see on their screen are two different things — there are obvious questions of support and testing that need to addressed .
17 They also mean that hospital care for all patients with diabetes is impracticable but that care in general practice must be sufficient to maximise glycaemic control .
18 They also mean that lending rates , due to the higher cost must be higher and deposit rates must be lower than they would be in the Euromarkets .
19 They also stress that the assertion that rural development serves all or almost all interests is a necessary myth .
20 But they also stress that if time and attention is not given to younger pupils , the cost could be great .
21 They also stress that the gypsy families would be registered , minimising any security risk .
22 They also saw that , bereft of a power base or allies , the PLO was powerless .
23 They also wished and expected charitable effort to grow .
24 They also argue that the latest draft of the charter , drawn up by President Mitterrand , has already gone a long way to assuage Mrs Thatcher 's legitimate fears about the loss of British sovereignty .
25 They also argue that , although industries and offices usually pay to have their waste collected , households rarely do so ( except , invisibly and at a flat rate , through local taxes ) .
26 They also argue that , given Pentos ' current level of borrowings , it is hard to picture Dillons ' expansion keeping up with that of Waterstones , which has the more capacious pockets of W H Smith to support it .
27 They also argue that the waste of resources associated with the ex post coordination of supply and demand through markets is as nothing when set against the loss of production associated with the weak incentives of a planned economy and when compared to the inefficiency , bungling and corruption of every economic planning bureaucracy yet devised .
28 They also argue that the performance of students who entered universities and polytechnics with vocational qualifications tended to be somewhat below that of A level entrants .
29 However , they also argue that only a vote for them is a vote for the Union .
30 They also sensed that it would help them to make sure that managed competition was made to work ; they feared that , if it failed , politicians might opt for a government-run programme that would cut them out entirely .
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