0 one more time: --
It's already taken me two hours - I don't want to have to do it all over again.
I've told you again and again not to do that.
You are reminded once again of the author's love of the sea.
We went to Edinburgh and back again all in one day.
Throw it away and start again.
Deborah's late again.
If he does it again I'll have to tell him.
1 in addition to the amount we know about or have mentioned already: --
2 once more, or as before: --
Once again, the practices of death were deeply politicised.
Phonetically, deletion is again viewed as overlap to the extent that the segment is not perceived independently of flanking elements.
Pragmatics might (but need not) intervene again to enrich further these truth-evaluable propositions.
The only available connection in this case is again government, which obeys relativized minimality.
Once again, however, the actual nature of this fusing is left vague.
Again, we do so with an eye to the history of probability in linguistics.
Again, it is not clear how the notion of a cycle adds any explanatory value.
A fraction (p0) again takes care of illness cases attributed to other causes than exposure to contaminated milk.