Sentence examples for but also conversely from inspiring English sources

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Over the two decades he spent in and out of NHS care, Bennett was vocal about the kindness and emotional investment of individual carers but also, conversely, of a collective ignorance that his needs were different to those that could be understood by a largely white establishment.

This suggests an interdependent structural function of the receptors and gephyrin, where not only postsynaptic clustering of GABAARs requires efficient binding to gephyrin, but also conversely gephyrin cluster formation is dependent on the efficient binding to GABAARs.

Because the expression pattern of the Adra2a gene in the brain is quite restricted (Nicholas et al., 1993; Wang et al., 1996), it might be possible to not only determine which downstream neuronal pathways are recruited by dexmedetomidine to induce sleep but also, conversely, which pathways might be involved in preventing this sleep-like state.

Second, more broadly, and tentatively, that we should not only advocate for policies that promote equity as an outcome of economic growth, but also conversely – we should make the case that promoting equity helps produce sustainable growth, a proposition that is supported by a growing body of evidence.

Similar(56)

In Mr Gore's case, it might mean plundering his opponents' proposed reforms in areas such as Social Security and education.The upshot of this extraordinary election could mean a descent into recrimination, as the losing party vents its wrath on the winner; but it might also, conversely, mean a flowering of bipartisanship.

Not only has it helped to reduce significantly the production of drugs, but it has also, conversely, destroyed whole sectors of European horticulture and fisheries.

In this instance, the analogy worked in both directions: not only did the electric telegraph carry messages and regulate the social organism in the same manner that the central and peripheral nervous systems governed the body, but the telegraph was also conversely adopted by scientists and doctors as a means of explaining the functions (and malfunctions) of the nerves (Morus, 1999, 2000).

She is intimate with authority, but emphatically beneath it, yet also conversely capable, in her very silent submission, of accumulating unspoken grievances with years of service and so increasingly menacing her employer with suggestions of some imminent uprising or unthinkable transgression.

Despair at the chaos of the outer world can also, conversely, drive composers into increased engagement with the art of the past.

Can a proposition s also conversely be entailed by σ without being a logical consequence of σ? Bolzano guesses that this is possible but he is not definitive about it (WL III, 346 348).

It also, conversely, means that for those who are not Prime members or Echo owners, there is not much to differentiate the service from the others in the mix, either by features or price.

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