Example sentences of "[adv] does [pron] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 So does everyone know what er
2 The idea is that one does not really accept a universal rule unless an imaginative attempt to put oneself in the place of everyone affected still leaves one happy with it , for only so does one accept the prescription that the action should be done in that case in which it would be oneself rather than the other who was in such a place .
3 So does everybody see it now ?
4 Has this occurred within the EC and if so does it reflect failure of the peer review system ?
5 So does it affect your
6 And the first one is , Is the policy required and if so does it give sufficient guidance .
7 Now obviously B does follow quite properly from A but let's start off with Mr Williamson picking up the question , Is the policy required and if so does it give everybody sufficient guidance .
8 So does it work quite well for them ?
9 The Profitboss takes pride in his company 's products and so does his team .
10 The Profitboss supports this marketing effort and so does his team .
11 So does he take his to a timber yard to be split ?
12 So does he believe this TV story ?
13 So does he have a final message for the British in all of this ?
14 So does he have Kaliber ?
15 So does I do n't think Kate is fat at all .
16 So does she go anywhere near these B and Q or Homebase , .
17 So does she regret that period of her life ?
18 Foolish indeed is he who supposes that the music is only an excuse for the parties ; not only does everyone go , but everyone has opinions .
19 Not only does one wonder what embarrassment might have occurred to warrant it but the propriety in not claiming the Ladies ' door and leading to a lavatory in the way the men 's clearly does , is a reminder of the delicacy of those times .
20 ‘ Is n't she a remarkable girl , Craig ? ’ he said , ‘ Not only does she repair shoes as good as any man , but she fights for her rights , too . ’
21 Not only does she execute embroideries , but designs them too — thereby encroaching on what had formerly been a male preserve .
22 In one characteristic only does there seem to be a limitation — size .
23 Not only does he collect the ball well when under attack , he also distributes it magnificently on occasions , picking out midfielders with great accuracy , sometimes over 20–30 yards .
24 Not only does he connive , she does so too , as in that most disturbing poem , 138 , where the second-person form is strikingly absent .
25 Not only does he enable us to cry ‘ Abba ’ with the joyous obedience and trust of newly adopted members of the family ; not only does he enable us to pray and articulate words of the prayer that Jesus taught us .
26 Not only does he enable us to cry ‘ Abba ’ with the joyous obedience and trust of newly adopted members of the family ; not only does he enable us to pray and articulate words of the prayer that Jesus taught us .
27 For not only does he emphasize the continuity of his poetic development but he also introduces echoes and half-parodic reminiscences of the English and European literary inheritance of which he was a beneficiary .
28 Not only does he handle the commercial activities of Kew but he is also responsible for its little-publicised conservation work .
29 Not only does he appear in many guises — far more than the few I have mentioned here — but the Devil seems to be chief of the evil spirits .
30 By the law of the land , not only does he possess none of it , he does not even have the right to own any of it .
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