Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv] because " in BNC.

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1 Well I should 've won anyway because I 've got sixes and fives .
2 As Rhodes ( 1985 ) notes , sub-national government in the UK has developed extensively because until the 1970s it was the prime vehicle for building the welfare state .
3 So my marriage has fallen apart because of these people sat here that think they know everything .
4 But few doubt , even in Nashville , that country has boomed precisely because of its predictable format and the readiness of its lyrics to engage with the mundane ups-and-downs of life .
5 Now that has led to many iterations in the software design and development as the programme has rolled forward because every time you find a mistake , it 's got ta go back along the whole test route .
6 ‘ But Sky is a major risk which has grown largely because of the activities of the competition , which have forced up the price of the product infinitely higher than we expected or was necessary .
7 Since the mid-1970s the proportion of stock held by non financial companies has risen partly because of the constraints placed on stockholding by banks and financial institutions .
8 But that estimate has risen sharply because most rely on importing components , and the rouble has since halved in value .
9 The Federal Republic of Germany has had both because of its electoral system and the decentralised way in which so much of Germany is governed , where many decisions are taken by the regions .
10 What has appeared as an intense , bitter and irreconcilable polarization has occurred partly because our basic moral concerns have not been the same .
11 Furthermore , competition has reduced somewhat because a number of the smaller software houses have disappeared due to the recession ; and the group is recruiting again , after having frozen this activity for the past couple of years .
12 The relationship between central and local government has deteriorated partly because a series of Conservative Administrations have continually attacked and deprived the local authorities of resources , and subsequently because of the poll tax .
13 At cocktail party noise level everyone has to shout simply because everyone is shouting .
14 Furthermore , I would argue that the general history of disability representation is one of oppressive or ‘ negative ’ forms and that this has happened precisely because disabled people are excluded from the production of disability culture and excluded from the dominant ‘ disability ’ discourses .
15 The work force has become increasingly female-dominated , but the numbers of full-time women workers has declined considerably because of job losses in manufacturing .
16 The twenty–three–mile branch line from Northallerton has survived only because of the Tarmac quarry terminal located at Redmire , supplying limestone for use as flux in the steel–making process .
17 In almost two years that expectation has evaporated , and now Hick is thought of by many as a mere one-day specialist , someone whose England place has survived only because of his limited-overs achievements ( 697 runs from 23 internationals at an average of 38 ) and his all-round ability as a fielder and more than useful off-spinner .
18 The increase in audit mandate of the six countries discussed has arisen largely because government agencies tend to exercise greater restraint .
19 That has changed precisely because of the figure of which the Government were boasting — the 1.3 million sales of council houses which were not replaced .
20 to say the situation has improved dramatically because I have said if we 're gon na
21 This extreme reductionism has failed simply because elements such as Pavlov 's ‘ conditioned reflexes ’ can not account for all aspects of behaviour .
22 ‘ I have come across numerous cases where a hip replacement has failed simply because it was not an exact fit in the first place , ’ said .
23 Oh yes , erm I think it was generally , er , they had to match the colouring of the rooms that they 'd got , the furniture they 'd got really because as far as the room was concerned er when , when the , new houses came onto the erm , ready for occupation , er they were all cream coloured inside and anyway and pale cream so they , they 'd got er any choice they wanted there it , really it was just to match their curtains , match their carpets , all their furnishings and erm , of course I suppose they , the rose coloured ones er went better than say the lemon coloured one and that because er people just er liked the idea of moving into a place that 's got a nice cosy glow in it , place sort of thing , but we never sell any at all , there 's , none of that type of fitting in , sold now .
24 Well yeah , I would 've thought so because le
25 Edna 's had to go home because Mum 's been took sick . ’
26 ‘ This is one of the biggest road construction contracts ever undertaken in Northern Ireland and we have not had to go overseas because we have the local skills to do it . ’
27 A sports centre in north Oxfordshire has had to close today because of a leakage of almost one thousand litres of potentially hazardous chemicals .
28 Now I knew of no better , and Alan should 've known better because he 'd done a lot more removals than I had and he said Oh you 're alright Neal , do n't worry .
29 He 's had a letter from Hereford General Hospital telling him he 'll have to wait again because the hospital has run out of money .
30 And er one or two got caught up occasionally now and then so we did erm have to go underneath because I was earning too much to get a free one it cost me seven pounds ten and I 've got the receipt for it .
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