Example sentences of "both [prep] the [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Its passage had been delayed by the calling of the December general election , at which Prime Minister Poul Schlüter had sought to strengthen his position by obtaining a mandate both for the budget and for a programme of tax reforms [ see pp. 37868 ; 37924-25 ] .
2 Zuckerman 's proposal of marriage to Maria in The Counterlife is an indication of its importance , and of the importance of escape both for the tradition and for the unsatisfiable Roth .
3 The exhibition included various crime prevention systems both for the home and the car and details of neighbourhood watch .
4 Higher taxes and higher inflation would have been a lethal combination both for the country and the Government , given that there was no prospect of improvements in employment either .
5 It ascertained that centres had formally sought Scottish Education Department and , where applicable , Local Authority approval , and also considered the resource implications both for the Council and for the presenting centres .
6 On a view of the facts as a whole , and making every allowance both for the finding as to the intention of the plaintiffs and for the fact that the learned judge saw and heard the witnesses , which we have not , I conclude that the facts found by him were not sufficient in law to constitute adverse possession .
7 This is why success in surmounting this stage in a satisfactory manner is so important both for the happiness and future sexual fulfilment of the individual and for the security and success of this civilization .
8 The return of figure-hugging fashions calls for smooth , seamless underwear , and now there 's lots of choice , both for the well-endowed and smaller busted .
9 This meant that I was free to respond to the effects that developed as I worked and I got a feel both for the subject and the pastels I was using .
10 Obtains pixel counts for one half of the image , both for the subject and the reference card .
11 She has deservedly won the respect of everyone in the field of movement and dance both for the Society and herself .
12 ( 3 ) That ( per Lord Mackay of Clashfern L.C. and Lord Griffiths ) on the true construction of section 63 of the Finance Act 1976 the taxpayers were assessable on the extra cost of providing the benefit , and from the point of view of expense incurred it could not be said that its provision involved significant extra cost to the school ; that ( Lord Mackay of Clashfern L.C. dissenting ) reference should be made to Hansard to resolve the ambiguity in section 63 , and that the Parliamentary history disclosed that the Act of 1976 was passed on the basis that the effect of sections 61 and 63 thereof was to assess in-house benefits , and particularly concerning education for teachers ' children , on the marginal costs to the employer and not on a proportion of the total costs incurred in providing the service both for the public and the employee ; and that section 63 should be construed accordingly ( post , pp. 1036C–E , F–G , 1039B , C , G , 1040B , 1042C–D , 1063A , H — 1064A , C , 1067A ) .
13 The ‘ expense incurred in or in connection with ’ the provision of in-house benefits may be either the marginal cost caused by the provision of the benefit in question or a proportion of the total cost incurred in providing the service both for the public and for the employee ( ‘ the average cost ’ ) .
14 Having examined the parliamentary history of sections 61 and 63 of the Finance Act 1976 , it was held that the parliamentary intention was that in-house benefits should be assessed for income tax on the basis of marginal costs to the employer and not as a proportion of the total costs incurred in providing the service both for the public and the employee ; that this effect applied to the education of the children of teachers who were employees ; and that section 63 of the 1976 Act should be construed accordingly .
15 Yes the best if there was a dry time a dry stack , they kept that very best but for the calf beds , both for the bothy and the house .
16 In short , an attack on all cultural derivations of the censoring , criticizing , evaluating superego and , fundamentally , an assault on its most precious and primitive prohibition , that against incest — the ultimate limit , barrier and restraint both for the individual and the culture .
17 However , it is when these pass beyond some threshold of acceptability , both for the person and for others , that the individual is recognised as suffering in a state of psychotic disorder .
18 Notice that empirical evaluation has implications both for the operation and the conceptual evaluation phases of our scheme , as is indicated by the arrows in the diagram on page 32 .
19 In fact , the relation is disadvantageous both for the slave and for the master .
20 I mean it stuck out like a sore thumb , I mean er by King George 's playing fields erm cos of the , they had n't the , th the , the s other story for that was as I said was we they sent er some of us to a class in Walsall for er aircraft recognition and er the days I went to this class , cos I went as er , er both for the factory and for the Home Guard , so that I could cover both the factory and when I were on duty , Home Guard and we was at a building on the corner of Corporation Street and west , and we was taking classes in there .
21 In recent years the time spent by the staff on advisory work , both for the government and public , and in the collation of new information from boreholes and excavations , has increased steadily .
22 Mail order selling has advantages both for the customer and the retailer .
23 But it is known that this custom can have dire consequences both for the woman and her children .
24 A quick and clean military victory for the American-led alliance ( or , even less plausibly , a sudden withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait ) would be the best outcome both for the market and for the economy .
25 There may well be problems ahead both for the pupil and for the school if the child 's family are not in agreement with the professionals ' decisions about the educational placement proposed .
26 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 .
27 I would say that they ought to be able to spend at a level which is within the S S As that have been given both for the county and for the districts , and therefore we should be below the three hundred and seventy eight .
28 He pointed out that the best papers should indeed go to international journals because it is good both for the author and for international medical literature .
29 At that time , there was no clear faith in an after-life , and so children represented the future hope both for the nation and for individuals in it .
30 The prison authorities see this flexibility as the principal benefit both for the deliverer and the candidate and they intend to build on this in future .
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