Example sentences of "both [adj] [conj] english " in BNC.
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1 | Both Scots and English , acting independently , have made Ulster a province of many races . |
2 | Successful productions are currently running in New Zealand , South Africa , Ireland , Germany — in both German and English — and Japan , in Japanese . |
3 | And for German customers , for example , we would hold the titles etc to invoices in both German and English . |
4 | Among the many notable prisoners taken was Charles , duke of Orléans , who was to spend the next quarter of a century an honourable captive in England , developing a considerable talent as a poet in both French and English . |
5 | By the Treaty of Edinburgh both French and English agreed to withdraw and to recognize the independence of Scotland , while in return Mary would recognize Elizabeth as rightful Queen of England . |
6 | Late in his recorded career he described himself as ‘ only simply lettered ’ , but his extensive citation of biblical , patristic , and canonistic authorities in both Latin and English suggests that he must have been familiar with academic sources . |
7 | He assembled , organized , and analysed a mass of authorities , both Scottish and English . |
8 | Among groups who believed the structures and orders of the Church — both Roman and English — had , from antiquity , polluted the immediacy of the ‘ Everlasting Gospel ’ , formal literary language and highly organised stylistic expression were viewed with suspicion , and were frequently seen as one more medium through which God 's truth had been fouled . |
9 | Severely puritanical and sabbatarian in outlook , he also had a great fund of homely anecdotes about village mores , in both Welsh and English . |
10 | It recommended a considerable increase in the advisory staff employed by LEAs , and in in-service training for teachers ; improved co-ordination of primary education in Wales ; and the fostering of both Welsh and English , especially Welsh as a second language in predominantly English-speaking areas . |
11 | A group of Puritans who felt that the Church of England was too close to the Roman Catholic Church had left England and gone to the Netherlands ; they noticed with regret that their children were becoming Dutch in speech and habits , and some of them decided that their best prospect of remaining both godly and English was to get in touch with the Plymouth merchants , obtain from them financial support and the legal right to found a colony , and go somewhere in America where English bishops would not interfere with them . |