Example sentences of "because [noun pl] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | just because researchers have strong feelings about what they are investigating , it does not automatically follow that their findings will be slanted in favour of their own beliefs and values . |
2 | The provision of reasons for decisions has become unpopular because reasons give more ammunition for challenge and negligence claims : see 14.7.7 . |
3 | Because merchants paid enormous sums for the right to sell vodka , the imperial government had long been prepared to overlook their chicanery at the point of sale . |
4 | It was a good place to find carrion because cars used that road occasionally and no doubt caught voles and such creatures in their wheels . |
5 | There are obvious reasons why not , but its absence contributes to a continuation of failed projects because authors make heroic assumptions and quantify them to produce fanciful targets . |
6 | The emphasis on programming in earlier systems was natural : firstly because computers demanded considerable programming skill , and secondly because the professional was interested in the possibility of solving complex programming problems using the basic instruction set of the computer . |
7 | And of course I get a big boost when something like this happens , because words make plain sense , even though Tod always reads them backwards . |
8 | A placebo controlled trial does not present this problem because subjects give informed consent , but regularly in case-control studies subjects are not told the true reason for the study for fear that the study will be biased . |
9 | Despite sovereign risk , governments and state enterprises remain major users of international bank loan facilities because bankers know such borrowers normally repay external debt and will make every effort to do so . |
10 | This is not only because there is such a wide range from which to choose , but also because worshippers have strong views and deep feelings . |
11 | Organisations are created because individuals need each other in order to fulfil goals which they consider worthwhile . |
12 | In effect , they were issuing equity ; the bond yields were low ( 2–4% ) because buyers bet that share prices would rise beyond the exercise levels , providing big capital gains and cheap switches into equity . |
13 | But selling linked products is more complicated than pushing individual ones , because customers require more help in making things work . |
14 | They do not need to do so — for much of the time at least — simply because things work that way in any case ’ . |
15 | Because males spend less energy in manufacturing each gamete than do females , males can potentially produce more offspring , in a greater number of productive matings . |
16 | The first pattern , demonstrated by tree frogs , for example , could arise because large males displace smaller ones from females , or because females prefer larger males . |
17 | Very young infants are loathe to give up their precious bodily products and this is largely because children gain pleasurable sensations from not doing so . |
18 | You would n't think men could die of br die of breast cancer , but they do because men have residual nipples and they do produce small amounts of oestrogen . |
19 | He had been obliged to tell her , of course , that it was an offence to deface a coin of the realm , but he had done as she asked because women brought sentimental tokens to him every day of the week and , anyway , it was only a farthing . |
20 | Women are more at risk from the harmful effects of alcohol than men , partly because women have less water in their bodies and the alcohol is more concentrated , and partly because of differences in men and women 's metabolism . |
21 | The fourth explanation accepts that the gender difference in morbidity is real and results because women have more commitments and work harder than men . |
22 | Because lords owned large tracts of land at a time when the opportunities for its exploitation were particularly favourable , and could add to this profit from tolls and customs on increasing trade , they could hardly avoid a substantial increase in their resources in the course of the eleventh century . |
23 | To blame an individual doctor for making a diagnosis of child sexual abuse because adults find anal abuse difficult to understand and accept has serious implications . |
24 | This charge , called the membrane potential , comes about because cells contain large numbers of dissolved salts in their internal fluid ( the cytoplasm ) , including sodium , potassium , calcium , chloride and others . |