Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [verb] not always [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I thought I 'd better prove that I do n't always forget about normal times for refreshing the inner man , ’ he drawled , but there was such a twinkle in his eyes , so much charm in his manner , that Fabia felt quite overcome by it .
2 That I do n't always feel up to … the way I used to .
3 I must admit that I do not always want to go to work but once I am there I nearly always have a really good time .
4 This means that they must on no account fail us , just as , to take a different level , the woman whose beauty we find captivating must be seen to maintain her attractions : so much so that we ‘ will ’ her to display a beauty that she does not always possess , or perhaps has never possessed .
5 You find that you do not always keep to your goals .
6 " Well , you know how it is , things that do n't concern you , in the papers and that you do n't always read " em , do you ?
7 Some a lot of you said yesterday that you do n't always get in this formal situation having to stand up in front of people .
8 The fact is , however , that we do not always do so .
9 In our society it has been pointed out that we do not always give due credit to the ladies who provide the refreshments at our meetings , and yet the coffee break is an attractive part of the evenings , the time when we can chat about the talk and other railway topics .
10 The sad fact is that we do not always treat our children very well .
11 Very common words , and particularly the short common words , are recognised so readily that we do not always look at them when reading text .
12 A recent Which ? report confirms that we do not always get a good deal from British sausages .
13 If you believe , as I do , that miracles sometimes take place between the brain and the writing hand , that we do not always know what we want to write until we have written it , then you will be gratified when the unconscious makes one of its surprise and glorious forays onto the page and not seek to suppress what has been given without your asking .
14 Our ability to recognise words which violate the spelling-to-sound rules is in itself a demonstration that we do not always use the GPC route ; but a simple experiment can also serve this purpose .
15 I 'd be the first to admit that we do n't always make the best use of our review space from the manufacturer 's point of view , because we mention what we feel is important to our readers and not what the manufacturer wants us to promote , though the two will often coincide .
16 The distinction between the individual and what is being looked for can be confused : the problem is that we do n't always know how much .
17 It is only because of our fears and hidden agendas that we do n't always get what we think we want .
18 Amphibians in the wild are food for so many other animals that it is not surprising that they do not always show themselves well even in confinement .
19 Like Between , in which foreign languages serve as a psychological trigger to recall the experience of incomprehension that is an integral part of travel , Textermination makes use of novelistic allusions which readers will be aware that they do not always understand .
20 New babies get so many lovely clothes as presents , that they do n't always get a chance to wear them all . ’
21 And yet all our common sense ought to tell us that it does n't always have to be chips with everything and meat with every meal .
22 When it comes to making practical use of this new technology , one of the important aspects of acoustic reflectivity is that it does not always paint the same picture as does light .
23 In this book , we assume that the similarity between the transformational process and our diagnostic test arises because the former was formulated in response to intuitions about the fact that the properties of many ( but not all ! ) adjectives could be considered valid for the E qualified in both the P positions in : ( 7 ) P E E P In any case , the test gives us two different ways in which the adjective French may be used with its noun , and the examples show that it does not always designate a property of the entity to which it appears to be attached syntactically .
24 Two inscriptions from the early fourth century show that it did not always do so ( Tod 103 , 108 = WV 7 , HD 20 ) : they have the unusual opening formula ‘ it seemed good to the Council ’ .
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