Example sentences of "because [verb] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In the real world , information is incomplete because gathering information is costly .
2 cos trolley buses , in this town were really the erm well I suppose they really came about , rather than motor buses right at the start because built trolley buses and so did of Laiston .
3 The processing of contaminated groundwater in above-ground reactors has the advantage of providing plume management , because pumping water from the centre of a contaminant plume induces groundwater flow toward the well , thus preventing migration .
4 But a digital system is more expensive because coding circuitry is needed to convert the analogue picture and sound signals into digital code and back again .
5 It seems from the work of earlier historians that at some time around 1200 the influence of the great magnates underwent a challenge : in part this was because the king was intruding more and more into what had been the magnates ' private preserve , the distribution of justice to their feudal tenants ; in part also because rising inflation damaged their incomes ; and because the individual ambitions of certain of the men who had been the tenants of their knights ' fees led them to seek their advancement outside their natural lords ' followings .
6 The pace then slackened , perhaps because rising prosperity eased some of the burdens ( and Henry VIII 's expropriation of the Church lands and assets eased the constraints on the king ) .
7 But the Recycling Rose does not always smell sweet , because recycling waste can often cost a lot of money ; and buying recycled products can often cost more than ‘ raw ’ products .
8 Standardisation of time was necessary because cancer incidence is rising slowly in the west of Scotland and because prescribing atenolol increased greatly during the period of study ( fig 1 ) .
9 They 're not on show because displaying costume is very difficult , because you have to have very strict environment control ; and light has to be very dim and you have to watch the relative humidity .
10 Nagel refers to Adam Smith whom he takes to be advocating , as a matter of reason , the restriction of moral judgment only to that which the agent has done in a narrow sense because to attribute responsibility for that beyond the agent 's control seems irrational and is akin to strict liability .
11 Section two , there was a revised estimate for nineteen ninety two ninety three and there are two main points to mention , firstly members will see that the revised estimates in total are less than the original estimates and this is because affording interest rates have made it cheaper to service the outstanding debt from previous years ' capital programmes .
12 Because Learning Outcome 2 and Learning Outcome 4 are linked , centres may find it beneficial to deliver and assess them together .
13 Such a bias may be reinforced by the fact that those who are deaf in the 45–50 age range are less likely than their fellows to survive to the following age group ( because the deafness is related to some general malady or because hearing deficiency increases their risk of fatal accident ) .
14 A strong correlation exists between party control and constituency unemployment levels , because parliamentary seats are small enough to represent distinct residential districts in larger urban areas , and because voting behaviour and unemployment are two variables which are both strongly related , in turn , to social class characteristics .
15 Some tenants would be better off or only slightly worse off when unemployed , because housing benefit would then cover their rents in full .
16 Everybody producing music for sale to the public has the same problem : because making music costs money , selling product ( records , tapes and CDs ) is the only way to survive .
17 Only long-agreed norms between governing elites and major economic interests are easily formalized in law , because introducing law which coerces one of the interest blocs may destabilize corporatist patterns of bargaining .
18 There 's now a shortfall of more than fifty million pounds in their pension schemes because falling interest rates are undermining what 's left in the fund .
19 Then , because fomenting distrust between the two men was all he could do , ‘ You get a chance , shoot him , ’ he advised with a nod at Louis : ‘ You do n't , he 'll kill you . ’
20 Erm , then I can , well because dividing point eight by , that 'll make it a strange figure
21 And again there was the quiver of amusement , because had Dierdriu ever been discreet when she went to a lover 's bed ?
22 I was probably reacting in part because leaving Genesis was a sad note .
23 The thieves left empty-handed from Gateway in Bishops Cleeve because reinforced glass had been installed in the tobbacco kiosk .
24 But I , I really want to have like a even if I stayed in Switzerland , because have mind so .
25 When the eight- and ten-year-olds did produce causal connectives , they used them in a way appropriate to the deductive mode , by using because to introduce evidence and so to introduce a conclusion .
26 The duration of this wait may often lead to the overflow record being processed more rapidly than prime data track records because processing time will often be low enough to allow this record to be processed as soon as it is located .
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