Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] not [adv] go " in BNC.

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1 The partnership does not always go as planned ; South Glamorgan county council has had to buy a train to keep a loss-making suburban line going .
2 Weighing on a weekly basis reduces the likelihood that people will weigh themselves obsessionally every day and reassures the women with bulimia that weight does not necessarily go up when they eat three meals a day .
3 Owen did not even go back to his office .
4 Of course , things did not always go so smoothly .
5 This operation is another example of how things do not always go according to plan , but with a little luck and a lot of hard work a successful conclusion can be reached .
6 The flute did not really go with a guitar and sax .
7 Stan does not always go down well with the establishment .
8 Life does not always go to plan .
9 The last word does not always go to the fastest gun .
10 Be warned ; legal cases do not always go the householder 's way , so put away the shotgun and do not get angry when people drop litter on your front lawn .
11 Youth ( a comparative term in this context ) and experience do not normally go hand in hand .
12 Peggy did not immediately go downstairs but went to her own room .
13 His encounters are essentially private in most cases , for polluters do not often go over his head to his superiors , either to negotiate or to complain .
14 More intense review than that provided by a test of arbitrariness will be necessary in order to ensure that the agency does not just go through the motions of listening to people .
15 The CBI does not even go this far : Sir Michael Angus , its president , says that compliance with the code should not be a listing requirement because of excessive bureaucracy .
16 But Galbraith admits there will be more : ‘ Our results could seriously misrepresent the total number because sufferers do not necessarily go to venereologists or dermatologists .
17 Others have been suggested : to prevent the conduct of government business being unduly hampered and delayed by ‘ excessive ’ litigation ; to reduce the risk that civil servants will behave in over-cautious and unhelpful ways in dealing with citizens for fear of being sued if things go wrong ; to ration scarce judicial resources ; to ensure that the argument on the merits is presented in the best possible way , by a person with a real interest in presenting it ( but quality of presentation and personal interest do not always go together ) ; to ensure that people do not meddle paternalistically in the affairs of others ( query : can representative applicants be accused of this ? ) ; to ensure that the applicant has a personal interest not just an ideological concern in the outcome ( but , query , may not a genuine concern for the interests of others be neither purely personal nor purely ideological ? ) .
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