Example sentences of "[not/n't] necessarily [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 Those that carry the same names as overseas beers are produced under licence and do not necessarily adhere to the recipe or strength of the original .
2 Anyway , since the English language , not unlike its speakers , and the climate in which it was reared , did not necessarily adhere to the principles of predictability , even had the thought of the good Earl occurred to me , I may st ill not have surmised that it gave proof positive one way or the other re the acceptable pronunciation of the Square 's Christian name .
3 And it appears from what the county council has said that they are they 're not necessarily opposed to this sort of development that we 're we 're looking at here but that er the case would have to be proven as an exception to normal planning policy .
4 Although increased cellular proliferation does not necessarily relate to carcinogenesis , some researchers have suggested the use of increased cellular proliferation as a marker of cancer risk in man and since some dietary fibres have been shown to increase colonic cellular proliferation and to increase tumour yield in nimal models of colon cancer the effect of fermentable fibre on cellular proliferation may be a cause of concern .
5 The keyword LAST-CHECKED-ISSUE does not necessarily relate to the CHECKED-BY keyword in the MODIFICATIONS-RECORDS field of the module referenced , but is purely for the user 's information .
6 Nor do I try to get in touch with Lord Mountbatten , and I would not necessarily want to .
7 The details of it all were a little mundane to him and he did not necessarily want to be implicated in them .
8 A charter party did not necessarily attest to the ownership of the goods shipped because the charterer might not have been a shipper , but merely a lessor of space .
9 Whatever the rules were , they were not necessarily made to be broken , but they were n't necessarily there to be obeyed either .
10 Thirdly , there is an autonomous definition of conservatism in which conservatism is not necessarily connected to any economic group and is not rooted in a particular historical configuration .
11 Affinitive relationships that exist between terms are not necessarily connected to one another in any fixed hierarchical manner .
12 THERE are secrets to being a boss which are not necessarily connected to ditching your pals on the way up .
13 The lay subsidy rolls of the fourteenth century yield much information on the subject of bynames and surnames for all categories of persons , and in many cases it seems true to say that such names were not necessarily applied to whole families nor ( given that they appear in different forms in successive rolls ) can they be judged to have stabilized .
14 The terms ‘ old age ’ and ‘ retirement ’ are often used interchangeably , but they do not necessarily refer to the same things .
15 My diagnosis of the increased gap between the participants implied by the Sidneian constellation is strengthened by Lyons 's argument that ‘ whereas first and second person are the positive members of the category of person , third person is essentially a negative notion ’ , because ‘ it does not necessarily refer to participants in the situation of utterance ’ .
16 The profane word elohim ( which need not necessarily refer to Yahweh ) is now used to describe Saul 's fits of mania and ecstasy .
17 A Halifax spokesman stressed the £20m provision on loans to the Kentish development Burrell 's Wharf was highly prudent and would not necessarily lead to a loss of the same magnitude .
18 Saturday 's name change was the sixth this century , and the previous alterations did not necessarily lead to a radical renewal .
19 He reaffirmed the belief he held then , that the use of soft drugs did not necessarily lead to a progression to hard drugs , although he conceded that he would never have encountered any other drug if he had not become involved with smoking marijuana .
20 The results of delegation of power from LEA to schools need not necessarily lead to the sorts of negative effects for teachers outlined above .
21 The trouble is , this does not necessarily lead to greater understanding of why something represents good practice .
22 I does not necessarily lead to an increase in the price of consumer goods .
23 It is argued that this difference may be partially accounted for by the higher standard of living in Sri Lanka , but also that the motives and social composition of offenders in normal times were such that depressed economic conditions did not necessarily lead to substantial increases in criminal activities .
24 The transformation of the problematic does not necessarily lead to a transformation of the form of validity of knowledge .
25 Professor Chapman points out that this does not necessarily lead to a drop in standards of physical care , but stresses the apparent risk that patients may occasionally be made to feel ‘ merely an appendage to a machine ’ .
26 It has been rightly pointed out that a quick ball from such a scrum does not necessarily lead to a running game and that the centre of the field , already bustling with activity due to the increased fitness and range of the modern player , would be clogged up with roaming loose forwards relieved of scrummage duties .
27 Black pupils need to achieve academically in order to enter the labour market even at the lowest level in spite of evidence that qualifications do not necessarily lead to jobs ( see Brennan and McGeevor , 1987 , for example ) .
28 To abandon ‘ news values ’ as the sole criteria of the media would not necessarily lead to a dereliction of duty .
29 If so , many more Sri Lankans will die before the government learns that more killing does not necessarily lead to less .
30 Sympathy with the conditions of the poor did not necessarily lead to a desire for reform by the state but for further voluntary action .
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