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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The importance of Bakhtin 's method lies not simply in the formal identification of a genre or a subgenre or a chronotope , but also in the connection which he establishes between internal generic form and external history .
2 This concentration on christology is of the very essence of Barth 's method , but the greatness of his theological achievement lies not simply in the method and form of the whole , but in the way in which he succeeded by this means in re-integrating and casting quite fresh light on all the great leading themes of classical orthodox belief .
3 One 's reason for doubt lies not merely in the way selection is made : it is simply that those selected have to be very independent indeed to withstand or divert the direction pushed by permanent staff , all of whom seem already to be behaving with unwonted circumspection .
4 The charm of this village lies not only in the pleasing situation , but in being quite unspoilt by modern buildings , and in still retaining a genuine ‘ olde worlde ’ atmosphere .
5 The significance of this lies not only in the fact that these are all writers who themselves adopted the ancient conception of the rule of law .
6 Hourcade also saw as a second feature of Cubist painting the organization of the whole surface in terms of interpenetrating or interacting planes : ‘ The fascination of the paintings lies not only in the presentation of the main objects represented , but in the dynamism which emerges from the composition , a strange , disturbing dynamism , but one that is perfectly controlled . ’
7 Thus the diversity lies not only in the differences between people , the sitters , but also in different ways of photographing and in the varying contexts within which we encounter the image .
8 But the state of a country 's mental health lies not only in the fate of its hospital patients but also in the general condition of its people .
9 The value of computerized information retrieval lies not only in the in-depth storage and retrieval of information but in the opportunity for developing in-depth search strategies free from the restraints of searching a number of bibliographic tools for relevant information .
10 This is happening not just in the ghettoes of American cities where intolerance has become institutionalised .
11 The crisis occurred not just in the old industries such as steel and shipbuilding but in artificial fibres , electrical goods and , par excellence , motor manufacture .
12 The history of science is of course an important part of our contemporary culture , to be considered not only in the context of the Science department 's work but also in History , Humanities , Religious Education and other fields of study , and in the process of inter-disciplinary thematic work in general .
13 The rationale for these objectives lay not only in the inadequacies which were acknowledged to exist in the secondary schools surveyed , but more fundamentally in the educational philosophy which prevailed with the significant actors at that time .
14 That will mean change not only in the East , but also the West of Europe .
15 This is done not only in the name of trade but also of aid .
16 These features are well exhibited not only in the early fossil orders but also in the Ephemeroptera and Odonata where the alternation of convex and concave veins is probably a mechanical adaptation to provide increased rigidity of the thin wing-membrane ( Edmunds and Traver , 1954 ) .
17 It occurs not only in the nucleus but also in the nucleolus in the cytoplasm .
18 The unofficial theory is revealed not only in the accounts by pupils of perceived offences against them by teachers , but is also seen in other images of school .
19 Golding 's Lord of the Flies ( 1954 ) is in the third person , though like Defoe 's most famous novel it is about an island marooning ; but Rites of Passage ( 1980 ) — the first of the Tarpaulin trilogy — is a memoir-novel , composed not just in the first person but in a pastiche of the English of the Napoleonic wars , especially in its sea-terms — a sort of ‘ sub-Jane Austen language ’ , as he has breezily put it .
20 Large-scale social insurance — covering sickness , accidents and old-age pensions — was introduced in Germany in the 1880s following the Kaiser 's announcement , inspired by Bismarck , that ‘ the cure of social ills must be sought not exclusively in the repression of Social Democratic excess , but simultaneously in the positive advancement of the welfare of the working masses ’ ( quoted Rimlinger , 1971 , p. 114 ) .
21 I remind him that great improvements have been made not only in the amount of assistance that is available to people who are unemployed , but in the amount of assistance to ensure that people receive training so that they can get back into work .
22 In operating an incomes policy on low pay , by changing the incidence of taxation on income and wealth , by cutting the rise in the welfare budget , while letting tax welfare be consumer led , the Government has brought about a revolutionary polarization in income and living standards , which can now be seen not only in the official data on income distribution , but also in widening class differences .
23 Just how important a role means-tested assistance plays in the Government 's overall strategy is seen not only in the numbers claiming this form of social security , but in its growing share of public expenditure .
24 Other prints , huge and complex , show his immediate concern for tribal life , as can be seen not only in the The Value of Water but also in the six-part Men are Working in Town .
25 Phizacklea and Miles ( 1979 , 1980 ) argue that , in the particular inner-city context that they researched , white racism operated not simply in the form of cultural stereotypes but as part of the process whereby white residents and workers attempted to make sense of public housing shortages , reduction in employment opportunities , and other aspects of urban decline .
26 As with the continuing strength of localism and authoritarian government , the roots of the succession problem lie not only in the fragility of the new states , but also in the legacy of pre-colonial societies .
27 So what you need to do is rather than have a big block of writing okay which is going to look not really in the format of this kind of newspaper is it ? what you tend to get in the tabloids is loads of these little ones .
28 I feel that this is reflected not just in the increased knowledge of the students but also in a change of attitude and a few greater degrees of empathy . ’
29 Kleisthenic and post-Kleisthenic Athens , then , owed to Pisistratus the idea of centralizing Attica without draining away deme autonomy ; but in the Kleisthenic arrangements , which lasted until the Macedonians suppressed Athenian democracy in 322 , that principle was used not just in the sphere of religion , but formally and politically , in the arrangements for selecting the 500-strong Council by lot ( for more on this see p. 119 ) .
30 Today the activities of 9,000 students and 1,000 staff are accommodated not only in the parkland campus of 330 acres surrounding the Trent Building but also within the adjacent Medical School and University Hospital and in the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences some 10 miles to the south .
  Next page