Example sentences of "not every [noun] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The most likely interpretation of 16 is that not every part of the car underwent washing and polishing , but the exterior surface only .
2 Since not every word in the lexicon is present in the corpus and those present need not appear with their rarer forms , the corpus is supplemented by the lexicon for determining the GFF ( i.e. each word in the lexicon is assumed to occur once in the corpus with each of the tags in the lexicon ) .
3 If we choose every tenth or every twentieth name , then this is called quasi-random sampling , since not every name on the list has an equal chance of being chosen .
4 However , does not every reduction in the inflation rate leave the real interest rate a little higher ?
5 Should not every household in the country know that the Labour party officially wants to deny the low paid the tax reductions given by our right hon. Friend the Chancellor yesterday ?
6 Not every incident on the street contained the potential for legal action .
7 The figures go some way to counter fears that the recovery is faltering , but they reveal also that not every sector of the economy is gaining .
8 Revolution might be staved off by " trickle-down " economics , in Europe and North America , on the basis of ever greater economic growth ; however , it was increasingly clear that not every family in the world could run a private car , or even own their own home .
9 Not every enforcement of a prohibition which differentially benefits people makes the state non-neutral …
10 This should not be taken too literally — not every rock in the crust is a granite — things like limestones are vastly different in composition — but the average composition of all the rocks on the continents is about that of granite and contains over 60 per cent of silica .
11 Mary 's marriage to Henry had certainly taken place by February 1381 , and Thomas might well have done what he could to prevent her marrying , but Froissart casts Thomas as a villain in his account of English politics in Richard II 's reign , and not every detail in the story should necessarily be accepted at face value .
12 It must be borne in mind that not every dead-end of a burrow terminates in a long , narrow hole .
13 ( It should be noted however that not every argument for the necessity of a male priesthood necessarily entails a complete picture of God 's dispensation as embodying male and female principles .
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