Example sentences of "because [pers pn] [vb -s] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 and Catherine now , Catherine is ideal because she opens her double doors and she 's out into a garden space you know ?
2 Well er he came , the taxi man you see and Irene I do n't know what , what was up with her because she gets my little bag into the taxi leaves all the doors wide open .
3 As an adolescent when ’ sex invaded my peer world ’ ; Sylvia constructs ’ Appearances ’ — a ’ glamour puppet ’ who plays by the rules ( except she does n't because she drops her many boyfriends before it gets serious ) .
4 Fo has a ludicrously inflated reputation in Britain — largely , I suspect , because he combines his left-wing views with an anarchic humour .
5 The individualistic bias that Rawls is accused of by Nagel is not that he rules out such conceptions but that he is not neutral regarding them because he makes their successful pursuit more difficult than that of individualistic conceptions of the good .
6 Because he pays his Algerian workers a pittance , that 's why .
7 I , when , when we go down to playschool I walk but because it takes what fifteen minutes to walk into town I put him in the pushchair
8 The tree was arguably out of place in any equation involving human beings , however disparate , because it lacks their moral personality' .
9 In her analyses of Freud 's conception of female sexuality , she demonstrates that Freud 's view of women as lack or as absence forces them into the discursive position of the hysteric because it denies them autonomous identity and obliges them to mimic the voice of the dominant male if they wish to be heard at all ( 1974:66–71 ) .
10 Madam , Nearly two million of us belong to the National Trust because we believe in what it stands for , and because it offers us superb value for our annual subscription .
11 So so erm , basic idea about crying is this kind of arms race situation , which offspring have been selected to amplify the signal , because it promotes their reproductive success , to get every little bit of extra parental investment we can for themselves .
12 And they told me about Azul , in Jersey , and before that I think it was before that they showed me the forensic photographs of all of them : Bissett skewered on the railings , grotesque and spread and limp ; the blood-smeared vibrator used on the retired judge , Jamieson ; the drained shapeless white body of Persimmon , tied to his grid above a pool of blood , then nothing when there should have been something ; then what was left of Sir Rufus Carter , blackened bones , distorted and bent , the black skull 's jaw hinged down in a blind scream but the flesh all gone very much a dental-records job and it was all black , the nails , the wood and the bones too but it 's their mouths their jaws I remember , their silent screams , hanging slack or jammed open and it gets worse because they show me the fucking video they show me the video they think I made or that I think they think I made but I did n't ; they make me watch it and it 's horrific ; there 's a man and he 's dressed in black or dark blue and he has a gorilla mask on and he keeps sucking on this little bottle he 's carrying which must be helium because it gives him that baby voice disguising his own voice and he has this fat little guy strapped to a chrome seat , his mouth taped , one arm tied down onto the arm of the chair , shirt rolled up and the little guy 's shrieking as hard as he can but it sounds quiet because the noise is having to come down his nose while the man in the gorilla mask looks from the camera to the guy in the seat and holds up this huge fucking syringe like something from a nightmare from an old movie from a horror film and I can feel my heart beating wildly because that 's what this is .
13 And that 's , I think , important because it gives us some concept of how far we would have to go to get there , as it were , apart from seeing it .
14 I think it 's probably better for us to stay away from all the f—ing scenes in Sydney because it gives us original ideas on life . ’
15 Because it brings me some comfort . ’
16 Group leaders are not ‘ mission-committed ’ to the group 's success , but rather want to maximize membership and the achievement of collective benefits for members because it expands their own patronage , power and prestige .
17 This clearly affects women adversely because it overlooks their discontinuous patterns of employment ( Martin and Roberts , 1984 ) .
18 These are old party bosses who believe in strong central government , not least because it confirms their own power .
19 The base is spared the curse of the ‘ brown-outs ’ familiar in Manila because it has its own power plant .
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