Example sentences of "[adj] because [verb] " in BNC.

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1 mind you might , might of taken some because say they took some in Valentine down there
2 In Kufra , for example , Zuwaya cadres drew back from imposing the full rigours of socialist regulation on members of opposed Zuwaya groups ; but in Ajdabiya — closer to Tripoli , more heterogeneous because swollen by immigration — Magharba cadres did not refrain from threatening Zuwaya landlords with expropriation ( although by 1979 they had not put their threats into action ) .
3 But you might say , and I councillor did say in fact that of course we would be most unfair in the way that we did this because to quote from him er we were giving no time , no time for discussion , no time for evaluation no time .
4 It was funny because to start with I lost that much weight , because I was n't eating .
5 So I 'm telling you Mr that I 'm not unemployed because according to the Government figures I am not .
6 That would be a little bit of a problem for Frank Clarke if er Cooper has got a problem with his shoulder you know if it 's if it 's serious because looking at his people on his bench you know Neil Webb and Crosby and looking at the make-up of his team he has n't really got anybody he could slot back in there unless he put er Rozario in there .
7 Torrance 's putt remains one of most lingering memories of the ‘ 80's , which is rather ironic because putting has never been one of the strongest parts of the Scot 's game .
8 Man , naturally slothful according to Malthus , only spread into more adverse climes thanks to the local scarcities of food entailed by his excess fertility ; with later settlers always eventually victorious because made doubly energetic in struggling with both rigorous conditions and previous settlers .
9 Well I said what he ought to do tonight , is be going to bed and have an early because do you know every flipping
10 For a moment balanced against London 's distracting inanity are the equally distracting primitive rituals now seen as inane because sundered from the Word :
11 Improbable because compared to the plump , leather-lined Bentley , a barn door has the frontal area of a postage stamp .
12 I know the strain has been great because operating as you do entails the most constant vigilance and cunning which no other troops are called upon to display . ’
13 ‘ There is much diversity in the legal work and computer law is particularly fascinating because pioneering legal precedents are being developed .
14 We are inclined to think that the grammar of the linguistic expression is some sort of consequence of the process being of a certain kind ; for example , that ‘ I remember X-ing ’ is true if and only if I X-ed because remembering is a process in which one somehow sees into the past .
15 It was not as I had expected at all because living in the kind of commune that Mary Finnigan 's house was , there was n't a lot of time for romance .
16 Technically the appeal against the decision of Potts J. is interlocutory because decided on an application by the defendants to strike out the claim as disclosing no reasonable cause of action , while the appeal against the decision of Phillips J. is a final appeal because his decision was on a question directed by consent to be tried as a preliminary issue .
17 Any natural selection involves differential reproductive success that is nonfortuitous because determined by the way variant organisms are interacting with an environment that is causally sensitive to those particular physical differences in the organisms .
18 could er , I do n't think that can be right because had that been right , had the commission been saying you 've got restrictions but there not malign , then we 'll be given you exemption , they would of said you 've got restrictions but you 've justified them
19 Now for all those reasons madame speaker , this these orders er er today are inadequate , too little , too late , we ca n't vote against them , much as the the member who preceded me seemed inclined to vote against them and I wish that he had the g er the guts of 'is cu the courage of his convictions er he should vote against them , er we on this side are far more responsible er than that because to vote against them er might be an indication that we 're as much in frau in favour of fraud as members on the other side of the house , er we 're not in favour of fraud , we welcome any progress to detection of fraud , even progress that we asked for five eight years ago when the relevant legislation was passed .
20 Yeah I do n't think she she would have that because see what the report says when it comes through .
21 And in this case it is particularly acute because to set up a typology in which science correlates with religious moderation risks the objection that what one means by moderation is going to change according to political circumstances .
22 In the real world , information is incomplete because gathering information is costly .
23 I shall be taken to implicate that he has only fourteen and no more because had he had twenty , then by the maxim of Quantity ( " say as much as is required " ) I should have said so .
24 This is important because according to Genesis , man alone of the created world is made in the image of God .
25 This is important because walking uphill requires more energy than walking along a level surface .
26 The distinction between the two cues is important because manipulating vertical disparities in the way described by Sobel and Collett , for example , has the effect of creating both differential vertical and differential horizontal perspective cues .
27 This is weaker because to say that A — M would not be true if N is false is not to say that they could not be true if N is false , as the stronger account demands .
28 I do n't know er why we 're not more continually erm more on the case as far as our members of parliament are concerned because remember they 're there for our benefit and front page of the Daily Mirror this morning .
29 However , what does seem to me to be both dangerous and impermissible is the judicial superimposition , under the guise of statutory construction , of a principle , supposedly based on some parliamentary intention nowhere expressed , that genuine transactions carried out in conformity with unequivocal statutory provisions are to be annulled or rendered ineffective because undertaken with either the sole or the predominant motive of obtaining the fiscal benefits which those provisions confer .
30 and it did n't happen in thirty nine because remember how monstrous it was
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