Example sentences of "not [adv] a [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He was not wholly a man of nostalgia , and the road accident which cost him his son at the age of 21 all but destroyed his religious faith .
2 Once comedy was given the incentive to develop it soon leapt ahead of the dramatic film : suddenly there emerged a handful of geniuses and this was not entirely a matter of chance .
3 Nevertheless , this attitude was probably not entirely a matter of hubris since the Treasury may well have had genuine doubts as to the potential effectiveness of planning [ Brittan , 1971 ] .
4 The authority will be purchasers and enablers of care , but not necessarily a provider of care .
5 The father in one family , himself a compositor with both a son and daughter following his trade , was described as " a first-class workman , clever , thoughtful and well-read … he is in the Trade Union " and also attended Labour Party meetings ( indicating incidentally that it was not necessarily a sign of disaffection from the union for a comp to send his daughter to the trade ) .
6 Thus , in moral deliberation it is not necessarily a confusion of validity and truth to give weight to the way in which a decision is reached as well as or perhaps rather than to the content of the decision reached .
7 This is not necessarily a matter of money .
8 It was not necessarily a world of fantasy .
9 This is not necessarily a recipe for despair , however .
10 ‘ The number of Cabinet meetings is not necessarily an index of efficiency ’ , said one who believes her brand of Cabinet government ( ‘ a president within a monarchy ’ ) is a more effective way of shifting business than the traditional collective model .
11 In the human context hard physical work is not necessarily an indicator of efficiency or performance often it is the reverse .
12 Such alienation from official institutions is common to many societies with isolated peasant populations ; it was not necessarily an outgrowth of colonialism .
13 To own land was to possess , not only a symbol of status , but also the most prized source of wealth and power .
14 But even in the 1860s , the notion that a " mere girl " might learn the trade very quickly and be doing as well as a man in a short time , was not only a threat to employment but a threat to the craftsman 's pride in his skill .
15 Our eyes and minds have felt the need for change , not only a change of view but also the psychological relief and stimulus of thinking of something new .
16 Such records are not only a stimulus for enthusiasm and an aid to forward planning but have communication value for a team of staff as well as for parents , and help continuity in case of staff change .
17 It needed not only a revolution in organisation but in technology too .
18 But it does indicate the extent to which Mary 's cushioned childhood created not only a cocoon of adulation , but a cocoon of immaturity which she seemed remarkably reluctant to pierce .
19 A positive experience of school was not only a reflection of examination success , but may also have resulted from good relationships with peers or a positive memory of several other aspects of school life .
20 The extent to which children are thought about while housework is done is not only a reflection on housework 's fragmented quality ; it also signifies the basic difficulties which inhere in the combination of housewife and mother roles .
21 The coherence is therefore not only a coherence over time but also a consistency or cohesion in action .
22 The year 1974 saw both Ceauşescu 's ‘ election ’ as President of the Socialist Republic of Romania at a ceremony in which he bestowed on himself not only a sash of office but a sceptre too .
23 The maintenance of living structure requires not only a flow of energy , but a multitude of controls on that flow .
24 He will appreciate that there will be not only a sense of relief at Yarrow , but a great sense of pride that the company has been entrusted with that order .
25 Faced with changes like these , the farm worker experiences not only a sense of alienation from the village , but often a real material deprivation .
26 Their in fidelity was not only a solvent of family ties in this world ; it also destroyed all prospects of reunion in the next .
27 Their attempt to cause trouble is not only a sign of division within the party ; it could also pose problems for Solidarity .
28 This increasing emphasis on ‘ dignity ’ was not only a reference to behaviour within the chapel but to the nature of the Church as a body .
29 Not only a question about art .
30 Perhaps we could all agree that it is not only a question of money .
  Next page