Example sentences of "[conj] indeed of the " in BNC.

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1 She reasoned that , if the Shills wished not to be disturbed , it was no business of hers or indeed of the police .
2 Dawn was advised that she might obtain more money if she went to court , but she felt that this would be too hard for her emotionally , even though she had no memory of the accident or indeed of the friend who had died .
3 The overall structure of the repressor when bound to DNA is little changed from that of the holorepressor ( Fig. 2 a ) , or indeed of the free aporepressor .
4 ‘ No class in Russian history ’ , to quote a leading liberal historian , ‘ has had a more momentous impact on the destinies of that nation or indeed of the modern world . ’
5 Both these theories rely on the individuating properties of place , without however offering a satisfactory clarification of the concept of place , or indeed of the origins of the idea of numerical identity .
6 Few of the million or so visitors who take advantage of the Garden as a public amenity each year are aware of the scientific heritage behind the Garden , or indeed of the high level of scientific work which goes on behind the scenes today .
7 It is an immediate , positive image which embodies the character of this production , and indeed of the long tradition at Peter Cheeseman 's Vics Old and New .
8 A fairly conventional view — but here it is transformed by an argument that makes Caliban not merely the boar , minister of the lustful Venus — in contrast to Prospero , who , like Adonis , is tediously keen on chastity — but the hero of the piece , and indeed of the collected works .
9 A good deal of what he wrote may be taken as a rejection of the ‘ liberal interpretation of history ’ , and indeed of the ‘ liberal humanist tradition ’ in literature ; nevertheless the centre of his story is the Ring and the maxim that ‘ power corrupts ’ , a concept unimpeachably modern , democratic , anti-though not un-heroic .
10 The nature of social chit-chat , then , and indeed of the bulk of our talk , must be tentative and indirect .
11 For consciousness is itself part of that fabric , and , or so I shall argue in Part Two , the value features which are found there are real properties of certain experiences ( and indeed of the physical and social environment in our personal versions of it ) which have an intrinsic prescriptivity .
12 Secondly , a distinguishing characteristic of negligence liability ( and indeed of the legal approach in general ) is that it attaches to single episodes of management failure .
13 In its turn this superiority posed problems of collaboration with the allies — and indeed of the balance of forces between Romans and allies — which occasionally emerge from our sources ( for instance , Livy , 25.33.6 ) , but which no ancient writer analysed , not even Polybius .
14 The coach departed from Clun at 8 a.m. for the four-hour journey to Minehead , the terminus of the West Somerset and indeed of the original branch line whose closure in 1971 led to the formation of the preserved railway which is so successful today .
15 Looking up at the roof , the roof of the whole of this hall range and indeed of the other part is is done in the same way .
16 And one of the most ironic features of the present debate as a matter of fact is that Steve Gould , who 's been the most vocal exponent of the punctuationist view , and indeed of the view that there 's something really quite special about the specification of them , his own field work is concerned with a mollusc snail called serin erm from the West Indies , which , when it was first described by anatomists , was classified into several genera and several hundreds of different species .
17 As I have already indicated , I am not sure whether there may perhaps be some mockery of the over-solicitousness of the Poet 's desire for this marriage and the begetting of a ( boy- ) child , as indeed of the appeal to the egoist 's desire to perpetuate himself .
18 The loyalty of the nobles , as indeed of the people generally , had already been tested by the humiliating treaty of Northampton in 1328 , by which Mortimer and Isabella bought peace with Scotland at such a price as to recall the sickening defeat at Bannockburn fourteen years before .
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