Example sentences of "[be] also [adj] [prep] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 Being thermolabile , these resins are also unsuitable for sections to be studied in cathodoluminescence or electron microprobe equipment .
2 Now , those three facts were true as far this particular woman is concerned , but they are also true in relation to you and to me today .
3 These two elements are also important with respect to the second instance ; namely , the character and development of the state in modern capitalist societies , and in the various forms of post-capitalist society .
4 It is also essential for banks to be directly involved in the world 's main financial markets , e.g. London , New York , Bahrain , Singapore .
5 The 100 per cent relief is also available with respect to certain shareholdings in companies .
6 It is also possible for patients to be admitted directly to general hospitals and never to psychiatric hospital .
7 There is good experimental evidence for the applicability of the BKZ Equation ( 3.19 ) and it is also similar in form to a more recent constitutive equation derived by Doi and Edwards and based upon a primitive chain model .
8 This qualification , normally with Commendation , is also acceptable for entry to the degree course .
9 The risk factor is also significant in relation to the purpose of the loan .
10 This is also true of baits to be retrieved .
11 The property is also convenient for access to the BBC Recording Studios at Pebble Mill , Birmingham University and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital .
12 The 18th-century interest in antiquities was also due in part to the fashion of touring European countries — the ‘ Grand Tour ’ .
13 This was also true in respect to the regulation of homework , which followed the outcry about the sweated trades during the early twentieth century .
14 A subsequent debate on the same issue in March 1982 was also full of references to the experience of 1981 , the impact of street violence , crime , decaying urban conditions , the breakdown of consent between the police and many local communities , and the spectre of ‘ more violence to come ’ if changes in both policing tactics and social policy were not swiftly introduced ( Hansard , vol. 20 , 25 March 1982 : cols. 1107–81 ) .
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