Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] [not/n't] [vb infin] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 ROBBIE D' you not know my voice ?
2 Just let them not transmit them .
3 Oh let me not betray my race ! ’
4 Let him not cross my path , that 's all ! ’ he said curtly .
5 Let him not take me in his arms .
6 ‘ They have got rid of the Christian God , and now feel obliged to cling all the more firmly to Christian morality : that is english consistency , let us not blame it on little blue-stockings à la Eliot .
7 It 's great to be instantly famous — and that 's how A&M makes them feel — but let us not forget what the company 's really interested in .
8 If we value independence in foreign policy making , let us not forget what happened in 1940 .
9 I believe the readers ads fulfil a necessary part of the market , but let us not forget our local and national dealers .
10 It is only right that we should analyse and debate the internal workings of the trade and its infrastructure , but let us not forget who pays our wages — the consumer .
11 Let us not leave it to others to fight for our goals . ’
12 ‘ Ladies and gentlemen , ’ he said when the police chiefs hurrying back was out of sight , ‘ let us not make ourselves deceived .
13 By all means let us seek to prevent congenital abnormalities , but let us not betray our Hippocratic tradition in the process .
14 Therefore , if we are to exalt the work of Georgia O'Keeffe , let us not exalt it because it seems to be a rare psychic perception of the world peculiar to a woman , but because it is good painting . ’
15 Consequently , unless we are convinced of the possibility of a reductive account of knowledge , let us not tie our hands by refusing to make use of facts that we know to be true .
16 ‘ But let us not darken our hearts by imagining the trial of their gentle loyalty in the Dark Tower .
17 Let us not say what we both know to be true .
18 Let us not take it for granted .
19 Let us not get ourselves too worked up so early in the proceedings . ’
20 Let us not delude ourselves that an equivalent would not have found its way into English if needed .
21 ‘ Well , thanks , ’ I said , ‘ for the kind words , Daisy , but let us not kid ourselves .
22 Can you not see what erm er this woman fainted into my arms and she was embracing me for letting her not take her fall .
23 Do I not face them as though they are slaves ?
24 Do I not promote your interests along with my own ? ’
25 And how far do I not accept what I think I might get in order to remain on good terms .
26 ‘ He is so deep in his books he would forget to eat , I declare , did I not remind him . ’
27 er , did I not tell ya ? ,
28 Did I not tell you it would be my very best work ? ’
29 When I was lately a little kind to you and you carried yourself so foolishly , did I not tell you you should say nothing of what passed to any creature , and yet you made a common talk of the matter ?
30 LADY DAVERS : Did I not tell you , Jackey , that I should have a wit to talk to ?
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