Example sentences of "[noun] also " in BNC.

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1 The contest also ended in disaster for 12 men from Ford Open Prison , Sussex .
2 The contest also created unprecedented interest among the media .
3 Maybe this time they 'll be a rather more serious effort in the European elections given that the er potential for influencing the outcome of the next leadership contest also lies in the balance there .
4 Dr Hari also congratulated Mrs Marian Fang ( Chair or the Hong Kong Special Schools ' Council and Principal of the John F. Kennedy Centre for Handicapped Children ) on her work with mentally impaired children .
5 In 42 of the country 's 50 states the electorate also had the opportunity to vote on a varying number of referendum questions known as propositions .
6 The bulk of the electorate also remained loyal to the same party in successive elections .
7 The dams also render the animals easy prey for hunters and trap them when the water is drained for irrigation .
8 A stronger argument which Cawson also develops is that major interests are not directly represented at local level , because whether sectoral ( for instance , professional or industrial organizations ) or production ( such as employers and trade unions ) their main levels of organization for the purposes of representation are national or regional .
9 Yes , the mind had its sufferings also .
10 Some of the performances also come into sharper definition before the camera .
11 His Oscar brought him further worthwhile film roles , often allowing him the chance to sing , as in Young at Heart and The Joker is Wild , but to turn in fine performances also .
12 Consequently , some first performances also prove to be the last .
13 Adakites also plot in TTD field .
14 Sentences and words also require interpretation — indeed they would seem to require this more obviously than pictures — and so we 're back on the circle of infinite regress .
15 The words also speak of the joy and fun of friendship , of looking into a pool of knowledge , of drinking and lastly of a tender farewell .
16 And the 66-year-old London financier had harsh words also for the MCC hierarchy who are complaining about the £17,000 cost of organising the special general meeting , pushed through by Tuesday 's 108-3 vote at Lord 's .
17 Such words cover a wide tempo area , and pace Neumann , minuets have the right to express themselves as they see fit ! , especially since ( 2 ) actual speeds associated with any given set of tempo words also cover a large tempo area .
18 The use of words also helps to bring across the message of the poem with words such as ‘ futility ’ and ‘ fatuous ’ giving the distinct impression that Wilfred Owen has almost given up everything that he once believed in because he feels that everyone is going to kill each other anyway .
19 Bernstein also suggests that students are encouraged to make an identification with their chosen subject and to form a disdain for other forms of knowledge .
20 A bumper issue for composer recordings also contained Walton 's Argo recording of his Façade , with the London Sinfonietta and speakers Peggy Ashcroft and Paul Schofield .
21 The very high quality of the tape recordings also seems to rule out amateur enthusiasts .
22 Lehman also ruled out Elizabeth Taylor , who had starred in Who 's Afraid of Virginia Woolf ? , which he wrote and produced , and who wanted the role of Dolly .
23 For up-market small-party charter hire , InterCity also procured the former London Midland Region general manager 's saloon No 6320 — something of a hybrid , comprising a special body on a Mk 1 underframe and B4 bogies , which had been converted for dual braking and electric train heating .
24 Hayzen also shows how a series of 2 × 2 matrices can be developed in order to give more specific insights into the company 's competitive position .
25 That chapter also makes a brief reference to the desirability of further work towards a double GCSE award in English .
26 The case studies by Rapp , Berry and Temple ( 1973 ) which were referred to earlier in this chapter also illustrate all the major reasons for failure of conservation in Tanganyika and post-colonial Tanzania - technical incompetence and incompatibility with existing agricultural practice has already been mentioned — also attempts at coercion of peasants to build erosion works ( p. 1 17 , 250 ) , and a lack of participation , with an excess of petty restrictions ( p. 251 ) .
27 The chapter also contains a number of illustrations drawn from documents of all kinds and ages relevant to the study of local history .
28 The chapter also proposes specific conditions for recognising gains in the p&l account — these are that the gain should be both earned and realised .
29 Since this evidence is patchy , the chapter also begins to identify areas in which future research seems important .
30 However , this chapter also includes other aspects of mental health including the affective disorders such as anxiety and depression and less clinically defined dimensions of mental health .
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