Example sentences of "[adj] also [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 It is interesting also to note that ‘ … people give the roots of the Petasites vulgaris , which abounds , to the cattle in winter ’ .
2 The report was careful also to underline atrocities committed by rebel movements , particularly in Peru and Sri Lanka , where , it claimed , innocent civilians had been indiscriminately murdered or maimed .
3 In general , when he condemns right-wing violence , of which there is all too much in Germany ( 670 attacks by right-wing extremists in the first four months of this year , up from 420 in the same period last year ) , he is careful also to condemn left-wing violence , of which there is fortunately much less .
4 It is instructive also to express the metric in Kruskal-Szekeres form .
5 If poverty is a long-term prospect , it is likely also to affect the morale of the patient and his carers .
6 Those reinsurers who instinctively ‘ follow ’ SwissRe are likely also to take their lead on this issue .
7 To give a concrete example , personal social services care is only one element in individual care systems in which family , neighbour and purchased care are likely also to play a part .
8 On the basis of this table , it can be said that the two variables are connected : a woman who declares a positive attitude to housework is likely also to have a high specification of standards and routines .
9 Wyatt 's worldly recognition that his ‘ device ’ needed to be changed if he was to continue through the seasons is likely also to have been learned through his parts in kings ' games .
10 These are remarkable achievements and it would be unreasonable to expect Malinowski also to have made theoretical contributions of comparable significance .
11 However once the courts began to be willing to reassess the constituent elements of jurisdiction , under the collateral fact doctrine , then it was natural also to require some proof that the condition was indeed fulfilled on the facts of the particular case .
12 Once the courts moved towards applying the collateral fact doctrine , and to that extent redetermining the constituent elements of certain of the conditions of jurisdiction , it became natural also to consider whether the evidence supported the existence of those collateral facts .
13 Any adequate expulsion clause would refer specifically to professional misconduct ( Clause 19.01.8 ) , but it would not be unusual also to impose positive duties on partners : ( 1 ) to apply timeously for the replacement of their practising certificates .
14 With free counterpoint it is possible also to vary the number of ‘ parts ’ to form chords of different densities at any point , so that each horizontal line can be made up of vertical combinations of various numbers of notes .
15 It is possible also to study the effects of drastic changes in existing fertility and mortality rates .
16 On these sheets it is helpful also to have the reference and the English translation .
17 It may be useful also to refer to the National Code of Local Government Conduct , para. 5 ( Appendix D , post , p. 105 ) .
18 Even at the design stage it is useful also to recognise that all this material will require procedures for updating in the light of experience
19 When considering Ernst 's equation , it is frequently found to be useful also to introduce an associated function Ε , defined by ( 11.11 ) With this , the line element ( 11.4 ) or ( 11.6 ) can be written in the alternative form ( 11.12 ) and the main equations ( 6.22d , e ) , or alternatively ( 11.7 ) , become .
20 If appropriate provision for expulsion is essential , it is as well also to consider the eventuality of partners leaving in less contentious circumstances , if only to ensure ( as considered above ) that the firm 's finances are so arranged as to be able to cope with both expected and unexpected departures .
21 The difficulty is that the assumptions on which it is based are to say the least shaky : the assumptions , namely , that only one vote suffices although more than one candidate is to be elected ; that preferential voting is reliable , even when used in ignorance of all the relevant information and inhibited by the arbitrary exclusion of candidates who might otherwise be successful ; that it is reasonable to grant to some votes the privilege of being transferred , and to lower-preference votes the possibility of exercising greater influence than is warranted by their very definition ; that it is reasonable also to give to all transferred votes the same weighting as to original votes ; and that election by quota is sensible even if the quotas are manifestly make-believe .
22 Based on their high sequence similarity , it is reasonable also to place parthenogenesis bacteria within this genus .
23 It is important also to sort out those trees and shrubs that , like rhododendrons , will only thrive on acid soils .
24 It is important also to put on the record the serious growth of racism and neo-Nazi activity throughout much of western Europe and what was formerly termed eastern Europe .
25 It is important also to remember that a post or pension given to a member could be a reward for past services as well as a means of securing future ones .
26 With a postal questionnaire , it is important also to check that the layout is neither confusing nor encouraging any particular response .
27 It is important also to note that we are not implying that any major catastrophe will occur should the stress level continue to rise so high that the glass spills over .
28 But while these ‘ broad brush ’ features of the story must not be forgotten it is important also to try to single out characteristics of Britain 's development that help to explain the particular shape of its own social policies .
29 Undoubtedly , this reorganization of the Northumbrian Church pleased Theodore , who secured the establishment o additional bishoprics north of the Humber , and Ecgfrith , who was not only rid of a bishop whom he did not want but able also to secure the appointment of men whom he personally favoured , men generally prepared to deal sensitively with the legacy of the Scottish mission in a post-Whitby era .
30 And in order for this to be possible , he must be able also to show that he understands what he has learned .
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