Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] often [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He said it was not easy to come to Cork with a favourite 's tag and play against a posse of cuemen he had grown up with and played so often in amateur competition .
2 In the 1984–88 series the intestinal type was seen more often with intestinal metaplasia ( 46 of 74 , 62.2% ) compared with the diffuse type ( 20 of 50 , 40% ) ( p=0.01 ) .
3 This happens more often in indecent assault cases than other sex crimes .
4 For example , superficial cutting occurs quite often in psychiatric inpatient settings , sometimes in epidemics ( Simpson 1975 ) , and the vast majority of such episodes do not necessitate general hospital treatment ( Hawton 1978 ) .
5 Despite this , constipating agents and dietry restriction tends to be used less often with increasing duration of follow up .
6 Fortunately this complication seems to have occurred less often with increasing experience .
7 Researching ‘ the family ’ , usually a code for studying women , means investigating women 's social interactions with children , men , and other women ; and social methods like observations and interviews are used particularly often in this area .
8 It has been suggested that the wild man , or wood-wose , who appears so often in medieval literature , is a conventional figure typifying madness and deriving from the mad king Nebuchadnezzar , who was ‘ driven away from among men , and did eat grass like an ox , and his body was wet with the dew of heaven ; till his hairs grew like the feathers of eagles , and his nails like birds claws . ’
9 Couples not only make love more often than at home , they also talk more often to each other .
10 On the other hand there was a divergence between staff judgements of need and the judgements of those discharged from their care , with staff opting more often for supported accommodation and the dischargees for independent living .
11 The combination of corn and fulling mills and dye house is encountered quite often around this period .
12 Indians wrote no historical books with numerical dates and regarded personal life as one of a succession of lives of the same individual repeated infinitely often in endless time .
13 This criticism was expressed most often by physical science students , but it was also made by physics students ; for example
14 The quota is ignored too often in British industry , but this stipulation does at least give you some extra security .
15 It is fair to say that Bourdieu 's fields ( the scientific field , the political field , intellectual field , and so on ) are more autonomous from class interests than Althusser 's superstructures ( and indeed Althusser is quoted more often in this context by Bourdieu than Weber ) but possess less autonomy , i.e. a smaller degree of Eigengesetzlichkeit than Weber 's ‘ Lebensordnungen ’ .
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