Example sentences of "[noun] does not " in BNC.

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1 Under the contingency insurance arrangements available in the market , but which do not form an integral part of the Agreement , insurance protection can be made available where the sum insured on private dwellinghouses does not exceed the threshold .
2 Just because our MPs give themselves a three-and-a-half week break does n't mean we can all benefit from copying them .
3 So it 's it 's an interest thing as well it keeps the interest it changes the emphasis switches the attention makes a break does n't it it just changes er er a natural break that happens and it changes attention .
4 Still thinking that my drink was spiked in Kansas does n't make me very trusting .
5 Our mandate does not change from culture to culture .
6 It is this new emphasis that causes such anxiety and guilt to those for whom self-healing does not work .
7 He also notes that the fact that transcendental meditation changes one 's brain waves does not imply that it is in any way helpful ; he might have added that the brain waves during meditation show a remarkable resemblance to those of someone who is drowsy or even asleep .
8 Here is one of those places , then , where the frontier does not follow the ridge of the mountains , but takes a sudden dive down on the French side .
9 Now jogging does n't give power to the big muscles of the body , it does n't do that so again you 'd you 'd have to be doing something which , that built up the power .
10 Even then the defendant does not go free — he is confined in a mental hospital until the Home secretary authorises his release .
11 Further , the defendant does not have the option of minimising the cost by deciding not to go ahead with the case !
12 So long as the defendant does not communicate his intention , he commits no offence .
13 Even though the defendant does not regard the nature of his own conduct as being disorderly , he has a sufficient mens rea to satisfy the section by being aware that he is using offensive language , or kicking over dustbins or turning out the lights in the cinema , or whatever else may be alleged to constitute the disorderly behaviour .
14 However , where a defendant does not reside or carry on business within the district of the court and he desires the action to be transferred to the court for the district in which he resides or carries on business , he may , after delivering a defence , counterclaim , or request for time for payment , apply ex parte in writing for an order to transfer the action to that court .
15 If liability only is admitted , interlocutory judgment ( N 17 ) may be given and a date fixed for assessment or the plaintiff left to apply under Ord 22 , r 6. ( 2 ) If the defendant does not appear and has delivered no admission or defence , then judgment may be entered ( or directions given ) as the court thinks fit ( Ord 17 , r 7 ) .
16 However , notice need not be given where the defendant does not appear , or where in a fixed date action he has failed to deliver a defence in time .
17 In a fixed date action , if the defendant has not delivered a defence within the time limited , or in any action where the defendant does not appear at the pre-trial review ( or preliminary arbitration appointment ) , evidence by affidavit is admissible without notice unless the court otherwise orders ( Ord 20 , r 7(2) ; Ord 19 , r 5(2) ; Term No 2 ) .
18 If at the pre-trial review the defendant does not appear and has not delivered an admission or defence and the plaintiff produces evidence as to the amount of his damages , then judgment may be entered for them ( Ord 17 , r 2(2) ) , but if evidence is not then produced the court may enter a judgment for unliquidated damages and thereafter , unless the court has itself fixed a date for assessment of such damages , the plaintiff may apply for such assessment on seven days ' notice to the defendant ( Ord 22 , r 6(1) ) .
19 As suggested in earlier editions of this book , a defendant does not fall within either category ( a ) or ( c ) solely because the MIB is obliged to meet any unsatisfied judgment which the plaintiff may obtain against him ( Powney v Coxage ( 1988 ) The Times , 8 March ) .
20 Talent does n't necessarily mean facility .
21 Talent does n't always come in huge packages — remember Mark Todd 's brilliant event horse Charisma , who was only 15.3hh ?
22 In Ireland , where the rugby population is , even at the most optimistic estimate , around a mere 20,000 , the base of the pyramid is obviously narrow and talent does n't just grow on trees .
23 The chapter does not follow the IASC 's approach of distinguishing items that are ‘ probable ’ to occur from those that are not , with only the former being recognised .
24 This chapter does not ask counsellors to pretend to be doctors , but to question whether ill-health is not more concerned with social/emotional factors , such as poor diet and lack of fitness , than with normal ageing .
25 The evidence reviewed in this chapter does not however demonstrate even in the earlier agitational aspects of the anti-slave trade campaign that antislavery took up radical methods and challenged the normal modes of bringing about change .
26 This chapter does not include Local Ecumenical Projects ( LEPs ) , which normally reflect a combination of the worship and music of their constituent denominations .
27 It must be stressed again that this section of the chapter does not attempt to look at the level and nature of racial discrimination in Britain .
28 The chapter does not reproduce the detailed guidance on valuations contained in the CFM .
29 This chapter does not consider how this problem can best be resolved for the future .
30 This chapter does not consider all these in detail but concentrates on SIB Core Rule 36 , which recognises the validity of Chinese walls and attempts to accord protection to a firm which establishes a wall over which information does not pass without the need to obtain the consent of the customer , and SIB Core Rule 18 which permits disclosure of the " basis " only of commission .
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