Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] [noun] both [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 For too long we have allowed ourselves to become bogged down in interminable discussions about organisation both within the classroom and outside it .
2 Preliminary estimates suggest that insurance claims could reach between £200 million and £300 million after taking into account the damage to buildings , the cost of reconstruction and loss of business both in the City and at Staples Corner .
3 This Centre offers a programme of studies both at the undergraduate and intermediate postgraduate levels .
4 A second compulsory course ( taught by development studies specialists ) would be on the Principles and practice of development both at the macro level ( eg the place of the Third World countries in the world economy ) and the micro level ( eg community organisation ; role of church-related NGOs ) .
5 Archaeology and history combine to show that jade was rated more highly than gold among some of the most sophisticated and highly civilized peoples of antiquity both in the Old World and the New.l To understand the appeal of jade it is essential to handle the material itself .
6 A paper from a member of SCAC with experience both of the Scottish and UK/Ireland work .
7 The Faculty has the advantage of being located in the centre of the Scottish legal system with its own distinctive legal traditions , one of which is an historic openness to influences both from the civilian systems of Europe and the Anglo-American common law .
8 Games opportunities at Goldenacre both during the week and on Saturdays also increase markedly at this stage .
9 The checks and balances of the US system lead to a fragmentation of power both within the executive and between it and the legislative branch , while executive dominance within the Canadian parliamentary system assures a more unitary approach .
10 The mass of altars both against the walls and on the piers are of high quality .
11 At the newer universities and polytechnics the process of institutional growth had led to a variety of adjustments both in the modes of teaching ( most notably through the introduction of the seminar ) and curriculum ( with a more modern and selective emphasis , and the use of the period study ) .
12 Sacrosanctum Concilium speaks of the presence of Christ both in the sacraments and in the liturgical reading of the Word ( SC 7 ) ; Dei Verbum likewise speaks of ‘ the one table of the Word of God and the Body of Christ ’ ( DV 21 ) .
13 backlog of fluid both at the extremities , you get swollen ankles .
14 The form , in fact , was one beloved of prosecutors both on the screen and in literature .
15 ‘ What is true is that the Government is considering a range of options both in the health service and other fundamental expenditure . ’
16 It is a metaphor of order both in the sense of ordering experience and of an ordered social structure .
17 The formulation and implementation of a national energy policy was the first priority of the new president in domestic politics , and , as he saw it , some sort of test both of the governability of the United States and of his exercise of leadership , ‘ Our decision about energy will test the character of the American people and the ability of the President and the Congress to govern this nation . ’
18 Chicks , squatting on the ground in the open , are in constant danger of attack both from the ground and the air .
19 Zuckerman 's proposal of marriage to Maria in The Counterlife is an indication of its importance , and of the importance of escape both for the tradition and for the unsatisfiable Roth .
20 Clinton made it his first post-victory order of business to send messages of reassurance both to the world at large and to the financial and business communities .
21 The student will develop the skills and knowledge required to process client requirements for air travel sold in and ticketed in the UK for journeys both within the UK and originating from the UK ( SITI ) .
22 Thus the Preface of the Catalogus Plantarum emphasised correct identification as a prime factor for success both in the nursery and the garden , and the text of the work presented a practical guide , suggesting the best uses for the new trees and shrubs with which there had been little experience .
23 to preserve standards of skill and knowledge by requiring training , experience or some qualification for membership , and by fostering the exchange of knowledge between members both for the ‘ honour ’ or social respect of the members , and in the public interest ;
24 It was observed that the theoretical and practical commitment of local authorities themselves to training-the overall ‘ training climate ’ — with its implications for availability of resources both in the library department and elsewhere in the authority , can have a significant effect on the extent of training undertaken .
25 The coming of God is linked with the making of rain both through the ‘ nimbus ’ and in what follows .
26 Within the Occident , such a process has been highly influential in the development of genres both in an older literary tradition and also in more recent media such as film .
27 Over the past hundred years , various pieces of legislation , from the 1882 Married Woman 's Property Act , which gave married women the right to hold their own property , to the 1980 Housing Act , which makes it mandatory for local authorities to give married couples joint tenancies , the property rights of women both in the public and private housing sectors have been gradually extended ( Brion and Tinker , 1980 ) .
28 According to sources close to Mr Mandela himself , the first two men out will be Wilton Mkwayi and Elias Motsoaledi , a very influential member of the ANC old guard with positions of leadership both in the union movement and in the ANC 's military wing , Umkhonto we Sizwe .
29 Lord Dacre kept twenty-eight indoor servants at Hurstmonceux who , with a constant stream of visitors , needed prodigious quantities of food both from the estates and from farther-flung markets .
30 As we all know , the nuclear households of married children may continue to be linked by effective bonds of kinship both with the residual households of their parents and of their married siblings ; but such continuing linkage is optional and , in practice , very variable .
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