Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb mod] never [verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Look , Neil , I promise you that libel action will never come to court . ’
2 If there are difficulties in claiming that ahi sā is the right way in all circumstances and that the way of violence can never lead to Truth , there are similar difficulties in assuming that no violation of moral duty is involved in the practice of satyāgraha , or that it is only through the practice of satyāgraha that we show ourselves to be informed by the spirit of Truth and non-violence .
3 Conversely , the practice of hi can never lead to Truth .
4 It is sufficient at this stage to point out that there are difficulties in making the categorical statement that the practice of hi can never lead to Truth .
5 Waugh perceived a resemblance between the two books himself , and in his letter to Orwell on Nineteen Eighty-Four he reproached him in a jibe as potent as any he ever made to friend or enemy : ‘ Men who love a crucified God need never think of torture as all-powerful . ’
6 ‘ True ’ workers ' control will never spring into existence in fully fledged form and socialists must fight , within the present society , for democratic measures which can help to ‘ de-mystify ’ management and raise radical questions concerning the organisation of work and the goals of production , whether these measures involve the accountability of managerial agents or the promotion of workers ' plans .
7 ‘ Just keep going and there must still be an outside chance the penalty clause will never come into force , especially if on Mr Trumper 's return he proves half as good as you claim he is . ’
8 But she says she 's confident the case will never come to court .
9 New Zealand , Australia and Scotland for that matter would never settle for second just to please a fickle press .
10 No , happenstance will never make for beauty .
11 Section conferences are composed of delegates , who in the main will never get to Congress .
12 Among names that immediately spring to mind are those of Sydney Schanberg , the former New York Times correspondent who was in Phnom Penh at the time of the fall , and whose subsequent search for his Cambodian assistant , Dith Pran , was documented in Roland Joffé 's film The Killing Fields , who arrived in Indo- China at the age of 21 and was there from 1970 to mid-1975 , first with Agence France Presse , then as a stringer for The Sunday Times — when all the other journalists were getting out , Swain was either brave or foolhardy enough to fly back into Phnom Penh in time for its fall ; William Shawcross who , along with many others , covered the Vietnam war for The Sunday Times and who subsequently became obsessed with the fate of Cambodia , an obsession that resulted first in Sideshow , which exposed the role of Nixon and Kissinger , and then in The Quality of Mercy , a study of the work of the Red Cross in Cambodia ; John Pilger , the British-based Australian journalist whose work on Cambodia may have had little concrete effect but has at least helped to ensure that the tragic country will never disappear into oblivion ; Philip Caputo , who went initially to Vietnam in March 1965 as a 23-year-old Marine officer with the first US combat group sent to Indo-China and returned in 1975 as a correspondent to report on what was left of the war .
13 But at Camperdown we see , for the first time , the unbroken en suite arrangements of private and principal apartments , from bedroom to dining room , with each room in the sequence which it would be used so that the mistress of the house need never appear in hall or corridor unless going out .
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