Example sentences of "[pron] can [not/n't] expect [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I tell you this because I know that I can not expect trust if I do not give it .
2 When you 've had an industrialist as a father and you know how a business works , you ca n't expect farmers to ignore every business principle to be Green .
3 ‘ But you ca n't expect Arnold Bros ( est. 1905 ) to help us if we show we do n't trust him ! ’
4 You ca n't expect miracles .
5 When you actually abolish these things , you ca n't expect behaviour to be totally unchanged .
6 For that modest kind of money , of course , you ca n't expect perfection .
7 You ca n't expect people to tell you this , tell you that .
8 You ca n't expect people to come out of prison and go dashing to the social security — not on the day of their release . ’
9 Clearly you ca n't expect admissions of people with disabilities er for example , taking one aspect of that er cultural and er that policy , to be high if you know the building itself is physically inaccessible .
10 You ca n't expect Mummy and me to do all the talking about you know what .
11 You ca n't expect Merrill to alter her arrangements at a moment 's notice .
12 We ca n't expect gratitude , any more than we want charity from others .
13 We ca n't expect help from her . ’
14 I know this is a bit of an affront to our high opinion of ourselves as human beings , er , of course many people regard it that way , but erm my view is that er we ca n't expect science necessarily to tell us things we want to hear .
15 We can not expect Britain to influence the direction the Community takes in the next decade unless it is a full and enthusiastic member .
16 We can not expect teachers of science , history of geography to accept that they need to know about , say , the nature of language or the multiplicity of its functions , unless we can show how the need for this knowledge derives — by a chain of relevance sufficiently direct to be convincing — from their own search for greater pedagogic effectiveness .
17 Here the modest claim is made that without the social services , a section of the population will be permanently unemployed because in advanced industrial societies ‘ we can not expect industry to create many extra jobs because of the speed of technical change and job-saving investment . ’
18 We have come to appreciate that we can not expect children to live by our adult standards too early , or too quickly , without doing them harm ; but nor should we expect them to socialize themselves .
19 Of course we can not expect linguists , text critics or publishers to explain to us how best to interpret , mark and process those classically ambiguous phrases which are now the stock and trade of historical data modelling exercises .
20 We can not expect pupils to learn the sophistication necessary for handling difficult concepts if we constantly draw a veil over them and shut pupils off from the real debate .
21 Hence we can not expect markets and prices to ensure that the marginal benefits of making a noise are equated to the marginal cost of that noise to other people .
22 As with externalities , we can not expect markets to allocate resources efficiently if the markets do not exist in the first place .
23 We can not expect voters to leave their conscience behind them when they go to the polling booth .
24 And if a man permits his personal belief to distort , alter or transform historical fact , he can not expect others , whether or not they share his belief , to condone the process .
  Next page