Example sentences of "[adv] only [det] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The procedure encourages parties to tax on only those issues that are the subject of dispute between them .
2 Here we will focus on only those aspects of the family which are central to the issue of gender inequality , while chapter 6 is concerned with a wider range of issues .
3 The dominant mode saturates effectively only those atoms whose ( Doppler-shifted ) resonance frequency lies within about I " of the mode frequency : other atoms are unsaturated , so that the gain actually increases with frequency detuning from the dominant mode : the excited mode burns a hole in the gain spectrum .
4 Children become aware of this and tend to communicate in only those words that the computer understands .
5 Paolozzi anticipates not only the rapid movements of our eyes , but also our travelling along in a car , as we take in only those parts that are most significant — head , hands and feet .
6 The technique in the experiments is to set up two photo-detectors on either side of the calcium or mercury source , preceded immediately by polarisers that allow through only those photons polarised in one direction ( Figure 1a ) .
7 Personally , I hope that not only all Catholics , but all other voters too , show this young man the door .
8 An even larger phyla would be the vertebrates , to include not only all animals but every-thing with a skeleton , articulated limbs or a shell , such as crabs or insects .
9 Thus , if the corporations in their study were divided into three groups depending on the size of their annual sales , then they calculated that those with sales over $1 billion constituted 42 per cent of all corporations but committed nearly three-quarters of not only all violations but all serious violations , whereas those small firms with sales with less than half a billion dollars constituted nearly one-third of firms analysed but only committed less than 10 per cent of all violations .
10 Norfolk had a particularly strong tradition in the subject and the university 's resident tutor , Rachel Young , was given due credit for this , albeit anonymously : ‘ her work is outstanding and has influenced not only many students , but also some part-time tutors . ’
11 Each table excludes not only any clients who died or moved out of the area before the periods ended ( for whom there was no difference between action and control samples ) , but also all those who at referral went straight into ( or remained in ) institutional care .
12 When people kiss , they exchange not only these secretions in their saliva , but also sebum , which is produced by glands around the mouth after puberty .
13 The new Association is best seen not so much as a pressure group founded to further the professional interests of teachers of English , but rather as a class-based mobilization which drew in not only most professors of English Language and Literature , but also like-minded politicians , administrators , and " men of letters " .
14 The erm point about are distribution within Greater York is that we have attempted to look at this in what I think is a a rational and realistic manner , we have looked , and you 'll see this from our supplementary paper , I apologize for its lateness , but I think it 's benefited from the additional thought that could be given to it , we have looked both backwards , at the present day , and forwards , we 've looked backwards at past build rates , we 've looked at the present day position in the sense of the population shares within Greater York , and we 've looked forwards in terms of the commitment figures that are given in the N Y one paper that we 've just been looking at , and taking all those things into account , and adding in what we see as the right location for a new settlement , namely Selby district , we come to the figures that are in our supplementary paper , and there is clearly a great deal of common ground between the evidence you get from looking either at past building rates or population shares , as now , or future commitments which all point towards a broadly similar distribution , we say , with the addition of a new feature namely the new settlement , so that I commend those figures to you as somebody who 's actually dared to put their toe , or maybe their whole body into the water , and given you not only some numbers , but also a basis by which if you should er have a different Greater York figure in mind , a basis on which that could be rationally er approached , I would not certainly defend to the last ditch the need to put a figure of fifty dwellings into the structure plan for the Hambledon part of Greater York , there may be a cut off point beyond which you do n't go , but certainly for Ryedale and Selby , with very substantial numbers there is a need to indicate what the appropriate division should be , and you could not for instance indicate what the er Ryedale non Greater York figure was , without someone telling us the , as the Chairman rightly said , having an idea of what the Ryedale Greater York figure should be , so it is n't really I think feasible to have district figures for non Greater York , and one Greater York figure , that does n't er get away from the issue , and nor does it solve the potential for confusion .
15 It is clear , then , that ideas developed while broadening the CAB service to rural areas may benefit not only those areas but busier bureaux too .
16 This imposes a very onerous obligation on the defenders ' agents and their insurers because the list must cover not only those documents in the hands of the solicitor or the insurer , but also those held by the insured .
17 And not only those tables .
18 Nevertheless , the literature on the professions per se provides a useful entrée into this type of education , because it identifies some of the main themes which characterize not only those professions but preparation for them : the existence of a body of specialized knowledge and expertise ; the influence of professional norms and ethics ; the autonomy and responsibility of the professional ; the relationships with colleagues , clients and the state .
19 And not only those plays , be it noted .
20 It is not only those texts which women might be able to estimate positively which she exegetes .
21 It should exclude ‘ not only those items which have traditionally been called extraordinary , but also those called exceptional ’ .
22 The development of economy-wide agreements for both Scandinavia and the Netherlands reflects , however , not only those influences which are specific to the various countries themselves but also more general factors .
23 Thus the term planning encompasses not only those places whose form shows clearly that an overall scheme lay behind the layout of streets , but also towns which , whatever form they acquired , were pushed into existence and developed by the active support of individuals or institutions .
24 The good news this year — the year of our 35th birthday — is that we have an increase in students attending our Teacher Training Course ; we must look to the future and ensure that we have not only more teachers , but a better distribution throughout the country .
25 All applications for Research Council , SOED or British Academy Studentships must be made by or through departments , but normally only those students who are UK citizens domiciled within Great Britain are eligible .
26 The salmon swam up only those streams which had been chemically scented .
27 Alternatively it is possible to check females and mate up only those animals that are in oestrus .
28 In documents outlining their plans for regional government , the Opposition state that the new tier would take its powers from Westminster and Whitehall , and be empowered to carry out only those functions of a strategic or regulatory nature , currently exercised by the counties .
29 The patient may indeed be made sick in another way by receiving other such unchanged doses , even sicker than he was , for now only those symptoms of the given remedy remain active which were not homœopathic to the original disease , hence no step towards cure can follow , only a true aggravation of the condition of the patient . ’
30 FAMILY SIZE — Though , in other contexts , it may refer to the size of the family ( i.e. the number of family members ) , in connection with fertility studies it usually denotes the number of live births to a woman ( sometimes only those children who are alive at a given time , e.g. at the time of the observation ) .
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