Example sentences of "the [noun] [that] both [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Well I think in common with most local authorities we 've been playing a sort of cat and mouse game with Central Government over the last ten years , where we have attempted to continue to deliver the services that we believe we 've been elected to deliver , and Central Government has been trying to close off what it would see as loopholes and gain control of us and stop us doing what it does n't want us to do , but of course it 's a rather unequal struggle and the cat and mouse analogy is quite a good one in that Central Government has all the power and is able to erm take control of us to the extent now that the budget that both the City and the County Council have set for the coming year has effectively been set by Central Government .
2 In other words , some good measurements might be lost , but bad measurements are likely to be picked up because of the requirement that both the subject measurement and the reference measurement must be consistent .
3 The banning procedure has a considerable political input , in the sense that both the district council and the Home Secretary act as controllers of the decision taken by the senior police officer .
4 We owe to II Maccabees the information that both the Temple of Jerusalem and the Samaritan temple on Mount Garizim were transformed into Greek temples ( of Zeus Olympios and of Zeus Xenios ) and that the festival of the Dionysia was celebrated in Jerusalem .
5 Many Labour councils recognized that the victory of the Conservative Party in 1979 reflected a loss of faith in the way that both the economy and the welfare state had been managed by successive governments since 1945 .
6 Support for it has come from the observation that both the brain and the conventional digital computer ( i.e. the one hard-wired only for its machine code ) seem to be surprisingly homogeneous in their internal structure , which led to remarks like Newell 's ( 1973 ) ‘ … intelligent behaviour demands only a few very general features in the underlying mechanism ’ .
7 Although there were divisions in the local authority as to how far the plan should redesign radically the traditional city centre , it was entirely symptomatic of the mood of the time that both the City Development Committee and Lord Reith should accept the more radical scheme outlined by Donald Gibson , the city architect .
8 ‘ Difficult , ’ agreed Henry , ‘ and made more so , I imagine , by the fact that both the Coroner and the Chairman of the Magistrates ’ Bench were there . ’
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