Example sentences of "[adv] account for [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Public-sector contracts anyway only account for a small proportion of Olivetti 's sales , says Mr De Benedetti .
2 According to Fitzgerald and Sim ‘ there is not one crisis , rather a whole series , which taken together account for the parlous state of the prisons ’ ( 1992 : 5 ) .
3 We know , therefore , that the frequency of landslides is quite enough to account for a major part of the wearing down of new mountain chains .
4 This rapid production of InsP 3 is fast enough to account for the odorant-induced generator potentials which appear after a latency of 100–200ms .
5 In other regions , e.g. Dorset or North Yorks. , a period of c. 20-30 years usually appears long enough to account for the major part of a feature 's development , ( this is possibly the working life of an individual craftsman ) .
6 These stars are both luminous enough and hot enough to account for the total luminosity within 5pc of the nucleus , estimated to be 0.5–2.0x10 7 , L and ; ( refs 67 , 68 ) .
7 Sieving of this order of simplicity is not , on its own , enough to account for the massive amounts of nonrandom order that we see in living things .
8 And then came the bier , its front draped with a shawl to indicate that it carried a woman , which perhaps accounted for the general meagreness of the proceedings .
9 The compartment gave only an oblique view of the altar , which perhaps accounted for the distinct murmur of conversation behind the grille .
10 As Brailsford had noted some years earlier : ‘ The decline of our trade with Germany , Russia and Austria would alone account for the whole volume of our present unemployment . ’
11 At the same time it should be remembered that over the centuries , exiles and deportees have only accounted for a tiny fraction of the total population of Siberia , the vast majority of which was there as a result of voluntary emigration , fortune seeking or the process of natural procreation .
12 During the course of the day the Bank 's objective will be to provide enough assistance to the money market ( through outright bill operations and the other techniques discussed below ) to relieve the overall expected shortage , but purchases of bills by the Bank at the early rounds of assistance during the course of the day might only account for a small proportion of the overall assistance provided , for four main reasons .
13 As the water gets warmer , it is visualized that the structure becomes more random , thus accounting for the increased fluidity of the water at higher temperatures .
14 Children were then allocated at random to the two remaining groups of adenoidectomy or no surgery in addition to unilateral insertion of ventilation tubes until June 1986 , thus accounting for the reduced numbers at follow up in the later years .
15 Scottish & Newcastle ( McEwans and Youngers beers , Newcastle Brown ) have a relatively low holding of tied public houses ( which are mainly in Scotland and the North East ) , but still account for a significant proportion of total beer sales , partly through sales to free houses and partly through the strong position of their brands in the off-licence trade .
16 In the present generations of younger women , very few never marry so this particular source of family care has almost dried up , although there is evidence that never-married women still account for a disproportionate number of unpaid carers ( Finch and Groves , 1980 ; Lewis and Meredith , 1988 ) .
17 Despite the decline in the growth rate of public service employment since the late 1970s , the public service sector still accounts for a significant proportion of total employment in the service industries .
18 ( Chlorine , though , already one of the main commodity businesses when ICI began in the 1920s , still accounts for a remarkable 12% of total sales ; the proportion will be reduced by last month 's decision to shut two chlorine plants at Hillhouse , Lancashire . )
19 The extent and quality of briefing possibly accounts for the overwhelming view of the assistants that their duties were ones which they had expected to be doing when appointed .
20 On this basis , the nuclear programmes still accounted for the vast bulk of the capital and turnover and such profits as there were .
21 Science and technology still accounted for the largest group of students , though recruitment for technology was encountering difficulties in Britain generally .
22 It is beyond dispute that they also account for a large number of tiny rabbits that are born in breeding chambers within burrow systems .
23 Although some of this variation may be attributed to inherent reliability problems in the computation method or original poor data quality , other geological factors probably account for the greater part of the observed variation .
24 The combination of fire and family probably account for the striking personalities of Ella Burrows and her daughter .
25 The constraints imposed on the market area by travel , therefore , probably account for the limited range of goods and services being provided at many sites , while more specialized facilities and luxury items were only available in the larger population centres where demand was greater .
26 The superb quality of the ormolu by Pierre Gouthière was undoubtedly part of the vases ' attraction , also accounting for the healthy £72,000 ( $131,400 ; est. £25,000–35,000 ) paid for a pair of Louis XVI candlesticks attributed to this master ( lot 72 ) .
27 The replies suggested that the choice of consultant and search firm was initially quite random , which partly accounts for the unsatisfactory performance occasionally experienced .
28 The decline in the number of farm workers partly accounts for the peculiar age structure of the industry .
29 The notion of " betrayal " took hold on militants in the labour movement and partly accounts for the bitter resentment between the Left and most union officials during the 1930s .
30 Although the fossil record is much poorer , coevolution with the terrestrial angiosperms probably accounts for a major component of the radiation of insects and birds .
  Next page