Example sentences of "[verb] never quite " in BNC.

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1 To this day the party has never quite healed the deep wounds left by what remains probably its most traumatic internal crisis .
2 Even after deciding to put public service behind him and concentrate on the private sector , he has never quite seemed able to escape involvement with government .
3 Yet the promised resurrection of the $200 billion-plus market has never quite happened .
4 If it succeeds , it could turn the personal computer business upside down , by delivering what the PC always promised but has never quite achieved : the ability to work where and how you please , no matter what computer you are using or how limited your knowledge .
5 On his death-bed , George V visited a royal curse upon the town with his famous final utterance ‘ Bugger Bognor ! ’ , from which the place has never quite recovered .
6 The answer is that Morrissey has never quite achieved ten such desirable plaudits , even with his Smiths output chucked in .
7 The real value of the licence fee has grown at a relatively slow pace and has never quite caught up with the rate of inflation .
8 He thinks that , unlike its competitors , British industry has never quite understood the nature , or the importance , of research and development .
9 Turkey is a market that has never quite fulfilled its potential — according to Nelson 's Paul Berry , ‘ Turkey has been regarded as the next Greece for more than 10 years ’ .
10 Well I mean even Mr in his heyday has never quite
11 Despite the electricity generated on parts of ‘ The Moneyspyder ’ and to some extend on ‘ Wait A Minute ’ ( particularly the hit-that-never was , ‘ Theme From Starsky and Hutch ’ ) , James has never quite harnessed the fury of his old band to his all-consuming love of jazz .
12 Reading between the lines , I suspect that Rodney has never quite forgiven either of them . ’
13 ‘ Colonel Fagg has never quite come to terms with the end of the Second World War , I 'm afraid , Elsa .
14 Despite the electricity generated on parts of ‘ The Moneyspyder ’ and to some extend on ‘ Wait A Minute ’ ( particularly the hit-that-never was , ‘ Theme From Starsky and Hutch ’ ) , James has never quite harnessed the fury of his old band to his all-consuming love of jazz .
15 I had done the score for Warren for Reds and I 'd never quite finished it , so I always felt I owed him one . ’
16 But somehow it stuck to her , a battered meaningless fragment of those far-off days , something that until now she 'd never quite managed to lose .
17 Loren was upstairs , engaged in that long getting-ready process that he 'd never quite been able to fathom .
18 Yet he seemed never quite at ease with his Christianity .
19 or taking the piss — I 've never quite known which . )
20 Six years — six years in which I 've never quite succeeded in getting you out of my mind . ’
21 We 've never quite got on to first name terms , Emily and I. Even in our respective retirements .
22 But we 've never quite had to do that .
23 I had entered fully into the shared joys of Christian experience , but I had never quite gained the satisfaction that other Christians seemed to have .
24 The principles here are clear , fully Catholic and yet in terms of pre-conciliar Roman theory revolutionary ( not so revolutionary in practice : some sacramental sharing had always continued in parts of the East where ecclesiastical reality had never quite caught up with the theory of ultramontanism ) .
25 Henry VI , still less than a year old , already king of England , now assumed the crown of France , a position which his father had never quite achieved .
26 She had known the truth for some time by then more or less , and the legal position , but had never quite managed to have it out with her mother .
27 She knew it was silly of her and that her mother would be the first to tell her so , but she had never quite forgotten Harry Keynes .
28 Through years of attempting to lick herself clean , for she had never quite lost her self-respect , Stripey had become as thickly coated with mud inside as out .
29 Perhaps she had never quite recovered from the efforts to please she had made then .
30 It was rather as if the author — for all the breadth of his experience which he was constantly insisting upon — had never quite grown up .
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