Example sentences of "[verb] both [prep] the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Two-way telemetry was used to compensate both for the atmospheric effects and for the first-order Doppler shift due to the relative velocity of the masers .
2 The three equations taken together embody both of the major predictions outlined in the rational expectations macroeconomic model developed in chapter 4 .
3 What made this situation peculiarly problematic for primary teachers was their sense that the firm stance on good practice taken by the Authority 's advisory staff was inseparable from the part they played both in the formal processes of promotion and appointment and in the many informal and subtle ways whereby individual teachers were encouraged and advanced — or discouraged and held back .
4 Further , decisions about the needs of kin , and whether one has a duty to put them before one 's own interests , cease to be static sets of responsibilities and become matters for judgement at a particular point in time , with such judgements being related both to the economic circumstances then prevailing , and to the situation of all the other members of the family group .
5 Usually the proposed adjustments are checked outside the meeting by the central team and recirculated for quick comment before publication in a final form in which they can be used both by the Modular Admissions Committee ( MAC ) to control enrolment and by faculties and departments as the base for resource management .
6 Percentage loss of prey from tawny owl pellets was found to be greater in summer than in winter ( Lowe , 1980 ) , and this could relate both to the greater numbers of immature rodents taken as prey , the bones of which are less mineralized and therefore easier to digest ( Lowe , 1980 ) , and to the likelihood of the birds producing the pellets being themselves immature In the case of the great horned owl it has been found that the stomach pH in immature birds is lower than that of adults ( Grimm & Whitehouse , 1963 ) and there is therefore greater destruction of bone and loss of prey .
7 Other factors , such as oxygen supply and the concentration of other nutrients , can and should be adjusted both in the aboveground reactors and the subsurface to enhance the overall process .
8 The chance of an exposure transmitting infection varies both between the different ways it can be transmitted and , for reasons yet undetermined , between different people engaging in the same activity .
9 The bargaining was affected both by the new opportunities opened up in the 1970s and by the growing risks attendant on the 1980s .
10 They are concerned with giving both to the younger ones coming up behind them and the older ones ahead , who are nearing the end of life .
11 That there is a necessary link between this form of discourse and ‘ fiction ’ is grounded both in the historical links between them and in their contemporary utility as means of contesting the legitimacy of the language of authority .
12 These changes , at their most general , are , first , the substantial development of the division of labour , inside cultural processes , and , second , forms of class division , related both to the specialized divisions of the process and to the ownership and management of the developed means of production .
13 They are represented both in the armed forces and in the peace marches .
14 Both classification schemes and alphabetical indexing languages fulfil both of the basic objectives of a subject device .
15 This Divorce Act was only allowed after proceedings had been taken both in the Ecclesiastical Courts for separation , and in the Common Law Courts for damages .
16 There was not so much business from significant large single customers , but it was basically well balanced both in the personal systems area and in the mid-range . ’
17 There is a very small overlap , in that some consultations were recorded both in the individual universities and by inter-library loan through BLDSC .
18 Both the philosophy of Kierkegaard and the novels of Dostoievsky spoke directly to his own questions by pointing to the tyranny of power , the pretensions of institutionalised Christianity , and contrasting both with the vital depths of human experience and need and the infinity of God .
  Next page