Example sentences of "[coord] sometimes as " in BNC.
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1 | In doing this , the Bank is increasing part of what is known as the ‘ monetary base ’ or sometimes as ‘ high-powered money ’ . |
2 | Johnson is 50 , Melville is 41 and sometimes as you hear this playground talk about sex you hear echoes of a world ignorant of Aids . |
3 | Now , Eleanor Thorne was eighty-nine years old , and her conversation was erratic , but Dorothea still sat with her , and for the odd fifteen or twenty minutes , and sometimes as long as an hour , they would talk , as they had always done and the present world swung temporarily into focus for the old lady , and she held on to it , like a crystal ball , firmly in her hand . |
4 | They were especially prone to liver problems , mostly seen as enlargements and sometimes as whitish spots . |
5 | The Japanese had been very clever in disguising themselves as Burmans and sometimes as Buddhist monks , with the result that many of the troops looked upon the Burmese as a lot of traitors . |
6 | It was sometimes described as Congregationalist and sometimes as Baptist and did not insist on adult baptism . |
7 | In addition , although many residents own their mobile homes or caravans , sites are usually only rented , and local authorities and site owners remain as landlords and sometimes as notoriously poor ones . |
8 | In the course of that activity the communicators will be operating sometimes as listeners , sometimes as readers , sometimes as talkers and sometimes as writers . |
9 | And sometimes as well as going this way we actually need to go in this way too , to actually get it out . |
10 | The earliest of these were collected in a volume of Cantiones which he published in 1575 jointly with Tallis , thus marking Elizabeth I 's grant to them of a twenty-one year monopoly of music printing ; others followed in two sets of Cantiones sacrae ( 1589 and 1591 ) and two of Gradualia ( 1605 and 1607 ) , a corpus of work almost as varied in technique and sometimes as ‘ madrigalian ’ in word-painting as that of Lassus — some of which Byrd may well have known — or of Alfonso Ferrabosco the elder ( 1543–88 ) who was his friend and colleague in the Queen 's service for sixteen years and wrote not only ‘ madrigalian ’ motets but simple Latin hymn-settings in a style very similar to Byrd 's . |
11 | Often local wells would become polluted from sewage tanks , leading to outbreaks , and sometimes as happened in Upper Halling , homes were evacuated and wells sealed off . |
12 | These soldiers were generally known as Brabançons , but sometimes as Navarrese or Basques or Germans , not so much to indicate their precise place of origin as to express the fact that they were foreigners and spoke a language which was not understood . |