Example sentences of "[not/n't] [vb infin] [to-vb] at the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | A large number wish to continue working as long as they are fit and do not want to retire at the state pension age . |
2 | Having spent the whole day listening to the contenders , I did not want to look at the list — I felt certain that my name would not appear . |
3 | The requirement of leave gives the court control over the proceedings from the very start , and because the respondent does not have to appear at the leave stage , it is relieved of the need to take any steps to get a weak claim struck out . |
4 | One does not have to look at the report which the hon. Member for Gordon has thrown away with such disdain . |
5 | The only way out may simply be to mandate a shorter planning period , an alternative the Japanese have demonstrated does not have to come at the expense of quality . |
6 | 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 . |
7 | Dersingham did not bother to look at the man . |
8 | He had nagged her about why they did not go to live at the School , instead of letting all those other people live there , and at last she told him why . |
9 | It did not seem to matter at the time . |
10 | The train was at last " on different rails " and Unionists could not fail to rejoice at the disarray on the left , but the different rails might prove more suitable for Trotsky 's " locomotive of History " than for Unionist imperialism . |
11 | Like a child who can not bear to look at the cupboard where the witch might live , she stared past the bench and its mummified shape . |
12 | It was funny , in a Lewis Carroll sort of way , and at least the result was passable , if only as a trade magazine , whereas the woman 's magazine had been beyond a joke and she could not bear to look at the end product . |
13 | They passed the hill , but she did not turn to look at the graveyard . |
14 | They 're very upset and do n't want to talk at the moment . |
15 | As you say , it 's my wedding day tomorrow , I do n't want to arrive at the altar with my face in a mess . ’ |
16 | Women suddenly discovered they did n't want to stay at the kitchen sink all day ; they wanted the fulfilment that comes from work , too . |
17 | mm you bring your book cos you do n't think to look at the card |
18 | I could n't wait to finish at the studio that day so I could slip down the record shop to pick up a copy , and several months later I still have n't stopped playing it . |
19 | It was rather a small one and it did n't appear to matter at the time . ’ |
20 | I did n't choose to work at the complex . |
21 | We did n't have to stop at the ambulance station for the key because Dei already had it — one of the ambulance drivers being a cousin of his . |
22 | So there is no possibility of knitting faster than the machine is scanning and you do n't have to pause at the end of a pattern repeat . |
23 | It is n't and you do n't have to stab at the keyboard so as to press both keys at exactly the same time . |
24 | " She 'll never be raised again , " and Maurice suggested that Willis would be much better off if he did n't have to look at the wreck of Dreadnought at every low tide . |
25 | Wendy Phillips shows you how on page 30 and do n't forget to look at the countryside in July with Iris Bishop on page 60 . |