Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] [verb] [adv] because " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | [ She ] … will not interpret my sharing of my pain as an assault , she will not turn away or urge me to be strong , or murmur some expression of sympathy or swallow hard because there is , finally , nothing to say to someone who is beyond comfort though not beyond caring . |
2 | Hermione Farthingale was one of the girls who had already been chosen and foolishly , I realized later , or maybe wisely , I partnered David and Hermione together because Hermione was extremely beautiful . |
3 | Later , in the boat and shouting again because of the whoosh of water behind them as well as the noise of the engine , Tucker told her , ‘ We could 've gone round by road but this way you get a better feel . |
4 | Mr Sproat pointed out that currently BR was under no compulsion to make concessions but did so because it made obvious economic sense . |
5 | I was sitting in the car park and I appreciated the area very much , it was nice , clean area but when I came to Walsall it was smoky and dirty area I 'm sorry to say that and er , but I had no alternative but to stay here because my father was here , I had no money and er , I thought because of relations job prospects might be better here than elsewhere . |
6 | He also makes the distinction between lexical and conceptual collocations ; the latter being word pairs that co-occur simply because they are associated to the same context or topic ( e.g. , ’ bomb ’ and ’ soldier ’ , ’ trouble ’ and ’ problem ’ , etc . ) . |
7 | The fracture repair is being tested first on the upper arm , which is difficult to encase in plaster and also makes the insertion of plates and screws hard because of the large amount of tissue , muscle and nerve material . |
8 | This was a return to the test of outrage , with all its faults , but it met little outrage in Standing Committee and fell only because of the dissolution of Parliament for the 1987 General Election . |
9 | Barbara Stanwyck spent her whole career suffering and dying just because the dreamership could n't stand to see a woman come first . ’ |
10 | Roy Hart 's main complaint is that he has to leave his car in a small car park and walk home because the Conservators wo n't let him take his car up to his house . |
11 | Advertising and its related arts are thus necessary to ‘ develop the kind of man the goals of the industrial system require — one that reliably spends his income and works reliably because he is always in need of more ’ . |
12 | But there are big problems that arise there because of this practice of having leave it to my spouse if she survives twenty eight days . |
13 | Radiation exposure to natural sources is a result of both terrestrial and cosmic irradiation and varies spatially because of differences in altitude and radionuclide distribution in the terrestrial environment . |
14 | The miracle portrays Jesus as being unwilling to help a Gentile but does so because of the great faith shown by the woman . |
15 | Only the affluent could afford to take vacations or to travel abroad because holidays with pay were not mandatory in the 1920s . |
16 | Tonight there will still be elderly people falling out of bed and dying alone because of lack of staff . ’ |
17 | ‘ Even though the property market has had its problems and tenants are n't as thick on the ground as normal , a number have looked at CADCAM but gone elsewhere because of the traffic problems , ’ he said . |
18 | I hope however , that as SA moves into a new era , these problems will be analysed and taken into consideration when restructuring especially because the SA National Director of Health Services , Dr Coen Slabbert , also acknowledged fragmentation as a major obstacle to PHC implementation . |
19 | Perhaps they have been driven out of the country and gone abroad because extra conditions have been imposed here . |
20 | Curtailment cover should be included to compensate for days lost if you have to cut short your holiday and return early because of illness or death in the family . |
21 | Quarter of all services on the prestigious Thames and Chiltern routes are carrying fewer carriages or arriving late because of the problem . |