Example sentences of "but [adv] [adv] [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 Further extensive tests are still being carried out on other samples but so far no trace of Miss Larkin , 24 , has been found .
2 Er the majority , but only just the majority of your assignments are complete and they are in six one eight to be picked up .
3 The exact cost , and hence the viability , of the energy source remains to be determined , though it is projected to be about 10 pence a unit , five times the existing price of coal but only twice the cost of nuclear power .
4 But only about a quarter of goods are imported , so a ten per cent devaluation would add 2.5 per cent to the cost of living .
5 But not even the contagion of disgrace had touched him through his king 's disastrous venture ; for he was in the north , far away from this débâcle .
6 But not even the prospect of experimenting with cooking samphire raised a sense of oppression that evening ; such conversations as were half-heartedly begun petered out .
7 But not even the acknowledgement of that could make the pain of losing him go away .
8 This was largely but not exclusively an obsession of Congregationalists , much as it had been of mediaeval bishops .
9 The value of your investment will depend upon prevailing market conditions including but not exclusively the level of the FT-SE 100 Index at that time .
10 First we had the ACC 's Stephen Campbell , in our 1 April issue , announce in his best Churchillian tones that is was : ‘ The end of the beginning , but not yet the beginning of the end . ’
11 The Labour party has attracted largely but not wholly the support of the working class , and the Conservative party that of the middle class .
12 Last but not least a shot of a baby .
13 Brown says NT exhibits a superior memory management scheme and is almost but not quite the equal of Unix at its best .
14 The authority will be purchasers and enablers of care , but not necessarily a provider of care .
15 It is embedded with some of the intelligence but not necessarily the wit of the author !
16 I thank my hon. Friend for that encouraging reply , but does he share my concern that certain Labour authorities , such as the city of Birmingham , carry out the letter but not necessarily the spirit of the law on competitive tendering ?
17 The Panopticon achieved this by facilitating the potential for , but not necessarily the practice of , constant surveillance by allowing supervisory staff to see without being seen .
18 Those who knew him remember an amiable man , but not necessarily the sort of person you 'd expect to end up in the White House .
19 It is a very important market in that it is the main link between all other sectors of the money market in London and participants include not just banks , but just about every area of the finance community .
20 At the outset , this dichotomy looks comparatively promising , but once again the equation of determinism with holism on the one hand , and of non-determinism with individualism on the other , gives rise to difficulties .
21 No it 's not just straight heads but like quite a lot of the time it is straight heads .
22 ( An influence on Leonard equal to that of A. M. Klein , also a lawyer , but more importantly a poet-novelist of considerable skill , whose familiarity with literature equalled his Jewish erudition and commitment unlike Leonard he was a ‘ ghetto ’ Jew of Montreal ) .
23 Not necessarily for what he did on the pitch , although the trickery and goals certainly helped but more importantly the presence of the man , and excitement he inspired amongst his colleagues .
24 But more generally the shame of not being like Japan has now been reinforced by the shame of not being like Romania .
25 The next most important feature is a heavy weight ; at least a 1½oz bomb , but more likely a bomb of 2oz , and up to 3oz .
26 In some instances the researchers accepted that this pattern might be explained by the preponderance of mode B schemes ‘ but more often a process of ‘ guided drift ’ could be detected , based on a stereotyping of both young people and mode delivery ’ ( pp. 38 — 9 ) .
27 Increasingly however , they will have to look to other institutions , sometimes another school but more often a College of F.E. , to provide specialised courses for their students at set times in the week .
28 Sometimes the turbine daunted them ; sometimes , I suspect , the stairs but more often the size of the place .
29 But more often the allocation of billets reflected social relations and deferential attitudes in rural society , as when , according to one MP , at Inverary in Scotland 150 women and children were housed in a cold hall , with bedding of dirty mattresses and sacks of straw ‘ with a broad arrow on them , that had been obtained from the local jail ’ , while near by the Duke of Argyll 's castle was left uninhabited .
30 To us , St. Joe 's embodies our own history : a history of caring and campaigning for homeless people , but more vitally a history of " Simon " and its ideas , principles and values .
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