Example sentences of "the [adj] [conj] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Furthermore , heterodimerization of Max with c-Myc mediates DNA binding by c-Myc , which is essential for both the normal and the oncogenic activity of c-Myc .
2 the lack of correspondence between the normal and the clinical literature should not be surprising .
3 But whether serial or parallel processing turns out to be the way the brain works ( there will be more to say about this too in the next chapters ) , there will be cellular events associated with both the short-term and the long-term phase , and we have to try to distinguish between them experimentally .
4 Contrasts in the life of colonial New England are shown in the Puritan Keeping Room of the 1680s and the cosy tavern kitchen of the 1770s with its beehive oven and well protected bar , in the blue-green panelled living room from Lee , New Hampshire , and the mid-eighteenth-century parlor of Captain Perley , who led his Minute Men at the battle of Bunker Hill .
5 In all cases , then , whether the infinitive evokes the possible or the real actualization of its event , the person of the to infinitive is referred to two positions in time , one before , one coinciding with this event 's place in time .
6 On the future of the party , Gorbachev declared that the CPSU " has neither the political nor the moral right to absolve itself from the responsibility for the destiny of the reform programme , to shirk its role and to retire to the wayside of the social process " .
7 The image produced within both the political and the socio-medical arena was forceful .
8 The issues became purely the military , the political and the humane problem of what you were going to do about it once you had it . ’
9 We can believe that Roman justice had many advantages : but there is copious evidence that the prestige of the papal courts was not the sole nor the main motive of many litigants .
10 The time has come when the fact ought to be generally admitted that the amount of government … which is necessary to the welfare or even to the existence of a civilised community , can not permanently co-exist with the effective belief that deference to public opinion is in all cases the sole or the necessary basis of a democracy .
11 However , what does seem to me to be both dangerous and impermissible is the judicial superimposition , under the guise of statutory construction , of a principle , supposedly based on some parliamentary intention nowhere expressed , that genuine transactions carried out in conformity with unequivocal statutory provisions are to be annulled or rendered ineffective because undertaken with either the sole or the predominant motive of obtaining the fiscal benefits which those provisions confer .
12 She pulled her foot from his knee , too conscious of the firm muscle of his leg beneath the sole and the gentle probing of his long fingers to find the examination anything but acutely embarrassing .
13 As shown in Fig. 2A , two footprints were observed either with the lower or the upper strand labelled .
14 Swapping of the modified and the unmodified cytosine residues within the Dcm recognition sequence ( CCUP/FCLO ) , however , abolishes the reaction ( lane 4 ; compare lane 6 for result obtained with completely unmodified duplex ) .
15 The explanation for this apparent paradox is provided by the distinction between the subjective and the objective role of historical figures .
16 … by far the most powerful weapon at the command of the League of Nations is not the economic or the military weapon or any other weapons of material force .
17 Outside government , what has been called a ‘ young man 's consensus ’ was developing on the necessity of greater State intervention in both the economic and the social sphere .
18 There is no indication how they decided what had to be paid for by the Stent but the total liability was divided amongst 132 quarter lands .
19 There is no indication how they decided what had to be paid for by the Stent but the total liability was divided amongst 132 quarter lands .
20 One has to try and explain what it is we are about and why we 're doing it and , if necessary , perhaps point out a few distinctions that may exist , for instance , between the professional and the amateur scene , not that I like using those words because I think they 're fraught with all sort of potential misunderstandings .
21 And the car parks are to the right and the main entrance is on the left and you just keep going straight on straight on straight on straight on and the bottom left hand corner is casualty .
22 These spatial variations , both at the regional and the local scale , are directly related to the structure of the rural economy .
23 With a realisation that many of the profession 's tasks , in both the private and the public sector , now being undertaken by graduates and full members of the Institution could equally well be done by qualified technicians , the role , influence and recognition of technician courses is bound to increase .
24 Unless the nationalized industries use the same interest rate as private firms , there will be misallocation of investment resources between the private and the public sector : society can gain by reallocating resources to the sector with the higher rate of return .
25 Many investment decisions , both in the private and the public sector , require assumptions about the state of the economy 10-15 years ahead .
26 There is a determination to defend the family as an essential part of the social organisation for social care , viewed in both the private and the public sphere .
27 The division between the private and the public sphere , which was located both in economic development ( the separation of work and home ) and in social ideology , was by the end of the nineteenth century at the heart of moral discourse ; as a corollary , not surprisingly , the development of social purity was to have profound effects between the 1880s and the First World War on the regulation of sexual behaviour .
28 Neither the Labour nor the Liberal Party had won , but it was clear that the Conservatives had lost- and in an election called by them on an issue of their own choice .
29 ‘ Whether under the Labour or the Conservative Government , links with the Commonwealth were regarded as precluding too close links with the countries of Europe ’ ( Kitzinger , 1961 , ) .
30 This is still heard in America today in both the literal and the metaphorical sense .
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