Example sentences of "[adj] both [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In this sense , it was interested both in the narrowing of the range of views presented in newspapers and the likelihood that newspapers could be used for political ends .
2 Their displacement was not however immediately perceptible even to a writer like Disraeli , who was critically interested both in the architecture and in the social function of great houses .
3 The investigators are interested both in the impact a nation 's economic performance has on the economies of other nations ( ‘ spillover effects ' and in the ‘ strategic ’ policy responses which such spillovers may induce . )
4 He is interested both in the future — how political changes might be brought about through information that stretches potential consciousness and causes a group to transform — and in the past .
5 This has been very harmful both to the industry and to the national interest .
6 Instead it qualifies the property inherent in the noun used ( see Chapter 1 ) , thereby producing a complex property which is different both from the simplex properties and from their simple sum or union ; and it is this property-complex which is relevant to the relation of identification .
7 In many ways the part of a horseman 's job calling for most of his skill was that concerned with working the land , and using a standard of craftsmanship set immeasurably high both by the tradition of his craft and by the immediate needs of cultivation ; and a horseman served a long and disciplined apprenticeship before he could attain to the standard demanded .
8 The conclusion to be drawn from these analyses is that whereas in some States , mainly in the northeastern United States , governments are generous both in the number of welfare recipients and in the amount of support allocated , those in others , mainly in the South , are much less generous .
9 I emphasise to the House that that has been made clear both in the speech of my right hon. Friend to the council of the Royal College of General Practitioners and in the management advice document issued by the management executive .
10 That is what Weber bids us do , when declaring that the final account must be adequate both at the level of meaning and at the causal level .
11 He had the difficult task in 1832–3 of reconciling his sympathy for the Whig government with pressing for the sort of positive action on emancipation which was acceptable both to a majority in the political and parliamentary class and antislavery militants in the country .
12 The bases and policies used by the audit should be generally acceptable both to the accountancy profession and to the business community .
13 There is evidence for this both in the slowness of attitude change in response to advertising and in the long duration of memory of successful advertising .
14 It was therefore fortunate both in the capitation it received and the extra financial support provided by an active and caring parent body .
15 Clearly this is consistent both with a period of about a day and with a very long period .
16 The magnetic force is perpendicular both to the direction of motion ( +z axis ) and the direction of magnetic field ( unc direction ) .
17 A firm must require the customer to provide any margin which is payable both at the outset ( initial margin ) and subsequently ( variation margin ) and take reasonable care to satisfy itself that the customer is aware of the consequence of not paying it .
18 The frequency of these extrasystoles , however , when they did occur , on an extrasystole per minute basis was similar both between the oxygen and air groups and between the three monitored periods before , during , and after the gastroscopy ( Fig 2 ) .
19 Their frequency , however , when present on an extrasystole per minute basis was similar both in the oxygen and air groups , and between the three monitored periods ( Fig 2 ) .
20 The counter arguments , however , are that in practice health care markets are highly imperfect both on the demand and supply sides .
21 The shots are flying straighter both in the sense of having less fade and of greater accuracy .
22 Interestingly , under these conditions A has an effect on certain quantum-mechanical phenomena.t It would be unfair both to the vector potential and to quantum mechanics to say that none of those formulations have engineering applications ( in fact the most sensitive magnetometer built to date is based on that kind of theory ) , but by and large engineers would n't lose much sleep if the use of A were banned with immediate effect .
23 The latter has allowed borrowers to take our mortgages that are larger both as a multiple of income and as a proportion of property valuation .
24 It was agreed that the key strategy for the next 18 months — two years was to produce a network of interested people who would be valuable both as a resource and as a means of disseminating ideas and information .
25 It is a bit hypocritical both for the questioner and for the Minister , who is a representative of the Government of unemployment , to criticise potential job losses under a Labour Government .
26 Far from winning concessions , however , they will find what they are doing is abhorrent both to the Protestant and Catholic communities .
27 The Aspendos stage building is particularly complete both on the auditorium side and the exterior façade ( XIV ) .
28 I am grateful both to the Education spokespersons who put a great deal of time in , in order to carry out erm their preparations towards this report and to and to take part in the consultation exercises and to my own colleagues .
29 Experiments with rat embryos suggest that this increased demand for oxygen is due both to a change in metabolism , from a predominantly glycolytic source of energy to utilization of the Kreb 's cycle and electron transport system , and to a necessary compensation for the absence of a functional chorioallantoic placenta which serves in vivo as an important organ of respiratory exchange ( 18 ) .
30 This variation seemed to be due both to the severity of the impairment and to personality factors ; it would therefore be simplistic and unwise to make generalisations based entirely on impairment .
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