Example sentences of "[verb] not just in " in BNC.

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1 and erm justify long-term development needs not just in total , but by recognizing making a major contribution to total land use but also .
2 It is pursued not just in specially funded research institutes , but on a large scale in industry , and by private foundations and policy institutes .
3 This is happening not just in the ghettoes of American cities where intolerance has become institutionalised .
4 We delight not just in surfaces ,
5 These matters are important because they explain how Pound and Eliot , who had campaigned as a team and would help each other for many years to come , radically differed not just in themes and attitudes ( of which something will be said hereafter ) but at this deep level , in the not altogether conscious interstices of their craft .
6 The crisis occurred not just in the old industries such as steel and shipbuilding but in artificial fibres , electrical goods and , par excellence , motor manufacture .
7 The oldest man on the Derry side , he is also among the most highly regarded not just in Ulster but throughout the country as a whole .
8 Emergencies demanding the swift rallying of armed men arose not just in times of national conflict , but when large or small bands of rustlers swooped on livestock and rode off with them , as those Hexham raiders had intended .
9 The outcome has been a major advance in thinking about the curriculum in holistic terms , in which curriculum planning is done not just in terms of subjects and their traditional labels , but also in terms of areas of experience , skills and processes as well as knowledge , and personal and affective aspects as well as the cognitive .
10 Golding 's Lord of the Flies ( 1954 ) is in the third person , though like Defoe 's most famous novel it is about an island marooning ; but Rites of Passage ( 1980 ) — the first of the Tarpaulin trilogy — is a memoir-novel , composed not just in the first person but in a pastiche of the English of the Napoleonic wars , especially in its sea-terms — a sort of ‘ sub-Jane Austen language ’ , as he has breezily put it .
11 The issue now was seen not just in terms of provision of new housing or the simple eradication of the slums as a technical exercise ; housing likes and dislikes had now to inform town planning of preferences in provision .
12 For we have seen that the bad consequences of an action are supposed to consist not just in pain , but also in loss of pleasure , and the good consequences of an action consist not just in pleasure , but in pain prevented .
13 I feel that this is reflected not just in the increased knowledge of the students but also in a change of attitude and a few greater degrees of empathy . ’
14 The cost is measured not just in terms of time spent away from the office but also by the inconvenience of leaving an office empty .
15 Kleisthenic and post-Kleisthenic Athens , then , owed to Pisistratus the idea of centralizing Attica without draining away deme autonomy ; but in the Kleisthenic arrangements , which lasted until the Macedonians suppressed Athenian democracy in 322 , that principle was used not just in the sphere of religion , but formally and politically , in the arrangements for selecting the 500-strong Council by lot ( for more on this see p. 119 ) .
16 Man is fallible , and his fallibility is shown not just in the manner in which the methods are used but in the belief-gathering methods available to him .
17 For we have seen that the bad consequences of an action are supposed to consist not just in pain , but also in loss of pleasure , and the good consequences of an action consist not just in pleasure , but in pain prevented .
18 It is interesting to observe how frequently the French style prevails not just in the building of hotels but in the whole ‘ architecture of pleasure ’ in Britain .
19 With France in chaos , its king a prisoner , Navarrese forces in control in Normandy and English garrisons established not just in Brittany and Aquitaine but also in Anjou , Maine and Touraine , it must have appeared to Edward that his ultimate triumph was in sight , and it is arguable that now , after the failure of the Second Treaty of London , Edward 's aim was nothing less than the crown .
20 But this revival of national awareness is happening I believe not just in Germany .
21 Leithers will give the Prime Minister a warm welcome , but they will put him in the hot seat because of mass unemployment , homelessness and general misery , which have been experienced not just in my constituency , but throughout Britain .
22 Mitochondria are found not just in photocells , but in most other cells .
23 Since power rests not just in individuals or groups but in anonymous social mechanisms and assumptions , they argued that the power of capital is revealed not in individual acts of decision-making but in the everyday application of ‘ those assumptions which give priority to private capital accumulation and market exchange in the use and distribution of resources ’ ( Westergaard and Resler , 1975 , p. 144 ) .
24 The Unit is involved not just in fixing up loans .
25 We are not just watching from the sidelines , but rather are rolling our sleeves up and getting involved not just in getting local people back into work , but in keeping them there .
26 More , an orthodox chromosomal gene and a virus that is transmitted inside the host 's egg would agree in wanting the host to succeed not just in its courtship but in every detailed aspect of its life , down to being a loyal , doting parent and even grandparent .
27 Juliette , it seems to me that openness must be represented not just in the way a school carries out its activities , but also the way it 's run , the way it 's governed .
28 Dagenham 's problems need to be viewed not just in the context of Ford but of the European motor industry as a whole .
29 Tolkien 's romance was an amalgam , then , and a potent one ; and its improbable success in his sixties lay not just in proving itself a bestseller but in making of itself the heart and mind of an international cult : a cult that was to spread to England from romantically-minded lands like California and the Antipodes .
30 Why do stereotypes like this persist not just in folklinguistics but also in modern scientific linguistics ?
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