Example sentences of "[not/n't] [adv] have the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We do not all have the same function within the body of Christ .
2 Erm Romans verse and verse four you notice this text is taken from verse twelve , rejoice in the hope and then persevering prayer , but if you go into verse four , what it 's speaking about there , but just as we have in one body many , members , but the members do not all have the same function and then in six to eight he goes on to describe that we all have gifts do n't we differing according to the undeserved kindness given to us , whether er so forth and so faith , ministry , erm teaching , exhorting , all these different gifts , though sometimes if a particular brother or sister does n't have a particular gift and we think well you know that 's a bit hard going I ca n't seem to listen to them , that 's an area perhaps where we could erm be quivering could n't we , or complaining , especially about assignments , you might get speakers that come here from other congregations , and some are better than others are n't they ?
3 They found that patients with the highest serum gastrin concentrations did not necessarily have the highest enterochromaffin like cell counts .
4 A similar conception , formulated in a more abstract manner , prevails in the work of the ‘ structuralist ’ Marxists ; notably in Poulantzas ' ( 1968 ) study of the capitalist state , where the object of enquiry — politics in capitalist social formations — is constituted by reference to a general concept of ‘ mode of production ’ , defined as being composed of different levels ( economic , political , ideological and theoretical ) which form a complex whole determined , in the last instance , by the economic level , but in which the economic level does not necessarily have the dominant role .
5 My point is not that we might count the relations between parts as themselves parts — though this is not necessarily mistaken — but that the relations into which the parts enter in making up the whole affect their character and value so that they do not necessarily have the same value as they would have had out of that whole .
6 Furthermore , it must be emphasized that legal concepts do not necessarily have the same meaning in Community law and in the law of the various Member States .
7 This important volume , subsequently republished in parts , did not perhaps have the immediate effect that might have been expected .
8 Not only had the various guerrilla movements cut all land means of communication ; the staff of the paper , including the reporters , had left to join one side or another in the hills .
9 We were told that not only had the Argentinian fleet continued on their route to the Falklands but there was now every reason to believe that Argentinian troops had landed .
10 But after she had finished the first part of her lecture ; after slightly nodding her head to the generous applause ; after the lights had gone up again ; after Ashenden had said ( as every chairman since Creation had said ) how much everyone had enjoyed the talk and how grateful everyone was that not only had the distinguished speaker fascinated each and every one of them but also had agreed to answer any questions which he was absolutely sure everyone in the room was aching to put to such a distinguished expert in the field … it was only then that Dr Moule was able to survey the two intruders .
11 ‘ That 's friendly ! ’ he shouted over the engine noise , and he pointed through the windscreen at the concrete airstrip which not only had the yellow cross painted huge at its western end , but also had two trucks parked in its centre line , thus making it impossible for any plane to land .
12 England and Wales not only have the highest crime rates in Europe — they also have the fastest rates of increase .
13 Edwina Currie and Simon Hughes not only have the same face , voice and mannerisms — they are in fact the same person : creations of a con- and drag-artist who dreamed up the idea to draw two salaries , and now wishes he had n't .
14 Not only have the basic building blocks of the computer become smaller and cheaper , and hence more readily available to a greater number of people , the language of the computer has become much more accessible to the lay person .
15 However , the numbers of divorces could be slightly misleading in that , not only has the general population risen in numbers , but marriage itself is more popular , as we saw earlier in this chapter .
16 ‘ The Marriott not only has the best service in town , but the best business facilities as well , ’ commented Travel Agent Magazine .
17 Not only has the Labour party not realised that GCSE results at 16 in Labour-controlled authorities are some of the worst , but it has learnt nothing — it still opposes standardised testing from the age of seven .
18 Does my right hon. Friend agree that not only has the Conservative party demonstrated that it is willing to spend a greater proportion of gross national product , but , by continuing to expand our economy , we have surpassed the Labour party bid at the 1987 election — when it said that it would increase spending on the national health service by 3 per cent .
19 Not only has the arid nature of the land inspired successive rulers to create the most exquisite and luxuriant ornamental gardens in their palaces and towns ; it has also spurred generations of textile artists to compensate for the harshness of their environment by weaving emblems of foliate abundance into their rugs .
20 Not only has the British government and its agencies borrowed less in recent years than other European governments , it is also the case that , until recently , the private bond market was narrow .
21 It then supplements the pre-emption thesis by showing that we should be concerned not merely to have the proper attitude to those in authority over us , but also to those in authority over others .
22 I know I can use matching Silky , but do not always have the right colour ’ .
23 An essay or a lecture on some general theme did not always have the required effect , as some of the otherwise magisterial addresses delivered when he was a world-figure tend to show .
24 ‘ Democracy ’ , rule by the people , did not always have the good press it enjoys today .
25 When one has the misfortune to make war in the interior of one 's own country , pure strategy can not always have the last word .
26 In these circumstances , as de Thomasson remarks , ‘ pure strategy can not always have the last word ’ Finally , could the nation morally survive the shock of losing Verdun , with all its legendary mystique ?
27 But training programmes of this nature do not always have the intended effect , according to Peter Adeniyi of the University of Lagos .
28 Family Allowance , or Child Benefit as a modified version of it is now known , has not always had the unequivocal support of the entire women 's movement .
29 It has long been known that skilled smallholders , owning their own plots of land , can produce very much more from an acre than large-scale farmers with labourers who can not possibly have the same dedication .
30 This did not originally have the plunging action of today 's routers , and was really only a fixed motor with a collet to take a limited number of cutters .
  Next page