Example sentences of "often [vb -s] the " in BNC.

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1 Third — note how in places punctuation , or lack of it , often enacts the movement .
2 The marketing machine constructed around successful fashion labels often turns the designer 's house into a glorified show home crammed with objets d'art , a totem of tastefulness , open to the press at controlled periods to offer fleeting glimpses as corroborative evidence of the host 's status .
3 Anne Ballard often raids the larder to find food to bake rock hard and add texture to her dried flower arrangements .
4 Indeed , health is a complex and multi-faceted entity which often defies the best efforts of researchers either to define or measure .
5 I felt my eyelids begin to droop and the warmth of the room slowly turning into a soft buzz in my head , the sort of sound which so often precedes the sudden slip into sleep itself .
6 Although these works commonly refer to the bourgeois world as a specific interest group within society , the actual material analysed , such as blue jeans , soap operas or boxing , often represents the cultural forms adopted by the whole spectrum of society .
7 However , a sale of business assets often represents the merger of two businesses where it is combined with the transfer of business activities such as goodwill or the benefit of contracts .
8 ‘ I was able to plug into a growing formula which was already successful and so avoid the ‘ learning curve ’ which so often represents the downfall of any new venture , ’ said Mr Singleton .
9 Hence he says : ‘ A servant and an army , if disobedient , are useless , but a disobedient horse is not only useless , but often plays the traitor . ’
10 Nature often plays the role of ‘ banker ’ , and individuals can therefore benefit from one another 's success .
11 As Sigmund ( 1980 ) demonstrates for Latin America , when compensation is finally paid , it often overstates the value of the assets .
12 It often involves the modern mind 's entering into old concepts for which there is no modern equivalent .
13 Sampling for mammal fossils often involves the patient sieving of great quantities of sediment to extract the fossil teeth .
14 It often involves the comparison of observed effects with expectations or intentions .
15 Because conflict often involves the awareness of being wronged in some way , unresolved past experiences of unfairness , injury or maltreatment can have a powerful effect as we react and respond to more contemporary occurrences .
16 Pure cases are rare , not so much because humans are selfish as because action on principle or from duty often involves the weighing of consequences , especially in politics .
17 ABOVE The destruction of large tracts of the landscape for modern road building often involves the destruction of archaeological sites .
18 The procedure for dealing with such requests is set out in R.S.C. , Ord. 70 and often involves the Treasury Solicitor making application to the court under the Act of 1975 : see Ord. 70 , r. 3 .
19 Thus measurement often involves the exercise of judgement .
20 In the fourth year they take two further one-term options and one senior honours course , which lasts two terms and which often involves the close scrutiny of primary source materials .
21 This reflects the fact that politics often involves the exchange of symbolic resources rather than substantive ones , since these are important in the mobilization of political action ( see ch. 8 ) .
22 We all like ‘ to do right ’ by our horses and this often involves the over-feeding of supplements , either because the horse does n't need them in the first place or because we tend to think ‘ a little bit extra will do him even more good ’ .
23 In so doing he often exposes the different colour of the priming ground underneath .
24 At the very least , a station often mirrors the national ethos .
25 This often contains the seeds of grass and other plants which before long sprout , like mustard and cress on a damp flannel .
26 There now ensues the nagging doubt that so often accompanies the crux of the climb ; it 's all very well getting this far , but until those crucial moves are made it could all still come to nought .
27 There is no guarantee it will work on any specific case — the first treatment often causes the condition to briefly worsen .
28 In fact if you concentrate attention on a habit it often causes the habitual behaviour pattern to break down .
29 ‘ Luck often spares the man who is n't doomed , as long as his courage holds ’ , agrees Beowulf .
30 Thus one often encounters the claim that a large number of Quakers ( and other dissenters ) contributed significantly to eighteenth- and nineteenth-century physical science and that Jews have been preeminent in mathematics , physics , and psychiatry in the twentieth century .
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