Example sentences of "[coord] is not [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Alternatively , if the target is a company which is not listed , or is not part of a listed group , then it is likely that the shareholders will be limited in number , accessible and able to agree to proceed .
2 The meeting booked for 20th May is a one-off to discuss one item only and is n't part of the normal sequence .
3 The oil tank is made from polypropylene and is not part of the main frame .
4 Mr Keith Pavey , the architect responsible for the project , says , ‘ Car parks are a much-maligned building type and it is rare to have the opportunity to design one that stands alone and is not part of an office block , shopping centre or other development . ’
5 It should be noted that , in particular , the percentage completion is a difficult subjective judgement , probably made by the project leader , and is not part of the program .
6 However , there is a distinct intensional structure underlying them ( again , the underlining is purely to indicate which P we are interested in , and is not part of our notational system ) : ( 47 ) That is , users of English interpret the relation between the property of the adjective and the word or phrase which instantiates the preceding entity in just the same way as they would interpret the relation between a predicative adjective and the subject in an explicit clause ; it therefore seems reasonable to call adjectives so used clausal adjectives .
7 Alford distinguishes the lay popular interest in development of services as the third and largely repressed force : it is not organized as a permanent lobby and is not party to the agenda setting between the monopolists and the rationalizers .
8 But is n't Manto near the Italian border ?
9 Q : But is n't marriage about partnership , trust ?
10 He admires this tradition , but is not part of it .
11 This fact is strikingly obvious to a linguist listening carefully to a conversation , but is not part of the " folk linguistics " of the community itself , who usually talk in terms of either speaking " ordinary English " or " chattin' Patois " .
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