Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb base] not [adv] [vb infin] the " in BNC.

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1 In some countries a large majority of the electorate do not even exercise the right to vote .
2 Visitors to the resorts on the Dalmatian coast do not always realise the poverty and backwardness which lie over the mountains only a few kilometres away from the bright lights of Split , Zadar and Šibenik .
3 The incitement provisions in the Act do not really extend the law greatly , since it is in any event a common law offence to incite another to commit an offence , even a summary offence .
4 But training programmes of this nature do not always have the intended effect , according to Peter Adeniyi of the University of Lagos .
5 Even species from the same group do not necessarily have the same preferences , hence the need to initially supply a choice of breeding site until you can determine what type and angle of surface they prefer .
6 Crowded together with no room to move ( the proverbial ‘ five laying hens ’ in today 's battery cage do not even have the space to stand up together — one or more must crouch ) , animals no longer wasted calories in non profit-making exercise .
7 In some cases , including the cattle code , it is added : ‘ Husbandry systems in current use do not equally meet the physiological and behavioural needs of the animals . ’
8 The utility lost in good times is clearly less than that gained in bad times i.e. individuals can gain from ensuring an average income in all periods provided the transaction costs of the policy do not fully swamp the potential gain .
9 Languages which have a category of voice do not always use the passive with the same frequency .
10 The emphasis in recovery is that the unmanageability of the family members ' own life is a matter of personal choice : the actions of the primary sufferer do not inevitably dictate the reactions of the family member .
11 Moreover , areas of high unemployment do not necessarily have the factories to make the desired goods .
12 But hard-headed calculations in both Washington and London in response to the grim realities of power politics do not wholly explain the remarkable Anglo-American relationship which developed from 1941 .
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