Example sentences of "he [verb] also [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 He has also to appreciate that as supervising officer his position within the building contract is unique in that he often has responsibilities to both his client and the contractor .
2 The problem this poses for the educationalist is formidable because , as well as designing curricula that will help the surveyor cope with future changes , he has also to provide the basis of a training experience to enable him to cope with contemporary practice .
3 However , if he happens also to run a business and sells one of the cars in circumstances suggesting that he is selling it in the course of that business , then he is likely to be regarded as doing just that , Southwark London Borough v. Charlesworth ( paragraph 9–20 above ) .
4 He had been under pressure from Edward III to do so for some time , but he seems also to have feared that Charles V 's forces , which were advancing into the duchy , might revive the rivalries of the civil war period .
5 He seems also to have been a Zadokite — but does this mean that the Nazareans and the Zadokites were one and the same ?
6 He seems also to have had the right to appoint deputies to act for him in individual duchy lordships .
7 He seems also to have become the object of the enmity of Haci Ivaz Pasa , the vezir , who had , among other things , led the successful defence of Bursa against the attack of Karamanoglu Mehmed Bey ( c. 816/1413 ) and had been the architect of the Yesil Cami .
8 He seems also to have been given sixty thousand in travel grants .
9 He seems also to have had the right to appoint deputies to act for him in individual duchy lordships .
10 He had also to tackle the technical problems of bringing two curriculum systems into one entity .
11 Pollage , Package , Stallage , and Standage ’ , but as the king 's representative he had also to enforce the law and maintain the peace at the fair .
12 He had not only to take Rome : he had also to retain it .
13 An evangelical of great piety and a man of gentle character and inflexible integrity , Johnson was charged with a mission beyond the powers of most because he was to be custodian of the morals of the infant settlement but he had also to conform to the pragmatism of Arthur Phillip [ q.v. ] , the first governor of New South Wales .
14 If her father had told him that he had also to hold the rod in his hand and drop the line into the water she would not have been surprised .
15 But like the risen Christ , he had also to prepare the faithful for his disappearance from the world .
16 He learns also to appreciate the possibilities open to him from using the skills of the professional librarian versed in bibliography and at home in the world of books .
17 He continued also to thrive at North Marston , where the chapter took pains to market their investment with a modish development of the church .
18 Meanwhile he continued also to operate as a moneylender , advancing large sums on bond during these same decades , and was appointed to a royal commission on the cloth trade in the late 1630s .
19 He intended also to attempt ‘ some play on what everybody says is characteristic , namely , vanity of power and personality ’ .
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