Example sentences of "[vb -s] [not/n't] [verb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The European Monetary Fund has not come into existence and the moves towards a common currency and a Community central bank are little nearer reality .
2 Provided that the action does not cease under sub s ( 2 ) of s 138 ( that is , the lessee has not paid into court ( sic ) not less than five clear days before the return day all the rent in arrear and the costs of the action ) then , if the court is satisfied that the lessor is entitled to enforce the right of re-entry or forfeiture for non-payment of rent , it shall order possession to be given not less than four weeks from the date of the order unless within that period the lessee pays into court ( sic ) all arrears and costs ( s 138(3) ) .
3 Related research in this area has focussed on the views of information systems managers only , and generally , has not taken into account the views of a range of managers .
4 It has not taken into account the evident disjuncture between the cultural norms of his home and community and those of the school .
5 The hon. Gentleman has not taken into account the £280 that a couple will have received this year because of the so-called flat-rate £140 poll tax reduction .
6 British Business , for 103 years the official weekly organ of the Department of Trade and Industry , has not passed into history without comment .
7 Overall , most teachers of essay-writing would say that academic register involves clarity and modern usage , coupled with a degree of formality that nevertheless does not extend into pomposity or technical difficulty .
8 I ca n't drift off to dreamland on a shakedown settee while Eva paces round the flat , watching that Jamie does not slip into coma .
9 Listen to what it says in John chapter five Truly , truly I say unto you , this is Jesus speaking he who hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and does not come into judgement but has passed out of death into life .
10 The duty to uphold and support just institutions does not come into play .
11 It is therefore for the domestic courts to decide whether , in any particular case , the agreement does so clearly infringe Article 85 that an exemption is very unlikely to be granted by the Commission , even if it has been notified to the Commission , or whether there is no infringement of Article 85 and therefore the question of an exemption under Article 85(3) does not come into play .
12 This is similar to the former method except that plant material does not come into contact with the water ; only the steam is passed over it .
13 Protection that does not come into effect until half the people whom it is supposed to protect have already disappeared from the scene is hollow protection indeed .
14 The trade ban between Montreal Protocol countries and other nations in products containing CFCs does not come into force until 1999 , which leaves quite a lot of room for quick expansion and sales .
15 Will my right hon. Friend remind the House that the 1992 legislation does not come into force until 31 December 1992 and that the same is true of the 1986 Single European Act ?
16 Let us remind ourselves , as the Prime Minister wisely did in his opening speech , that the Maastricht treaty does not come into force for more than 12 months — at the beginning of 1993 — and only if every one of the 12
17 He does not take into consideration the fact that they are killing , or trying to kill an living being .
18 It does not take into account the intrinsic morality of this group .
19 It has been estimated that the capital cost of a 1,000 MW installation on the UK coast could be comparable with the cost of a conventional power station of the same capacity but this does not take into account the amount of R & D necessary both to develop a 2MW , 100-metre diameter aerogenerator and to design the kind of structures and transmission systems to withstand the rigours of the ocean .
20 It does not take into account food allergies — some people are allergic to wheat for example — or if you wish to avoid animal foods altogether ( veganism ) or whether , like myself , you prefer not to eat meat or fish .
21 Some would argue that such a view does not take into account the complex nature of the human mind .
22 In situations where the price system does not take into account all the costs and benefits to the whole community , nationalised industries operating in the ‘ national interest ’ were directed to take into account the externalities discussed above .
23 However , this does not take into account the different sizes of the populations of working age between the regions .
24 But that , of course , does not take into account the loan we made you at the start of the year .
25 It does not take into account wrecked aircraft in the many Pacific Islands and the many more known to be in shallow waters — these must await salvage and/or more confirmable status .
26 Equally the formula does not take into account increased housing costs .
27 Its figure is higher than the CBO 's largely because it does not take into account the fact that the quarterly long-bond auctions had already been pruned over the past year , from around $12 billion to $1.25 billion .
28 a , Data recording the per cent of lymphocytes damaged over time does not take into account the fact that in the period immediately after radiotherapy , the peripheral lymphocyte count in the majority of patients falls .
29 I suggest that the discrepancy between the climate modelling results which indicate seasonal temperature extremes , and the increasing body of geological information documenting a temperate climate , may be explained by the fact that the palaeogeography used in the models does not take into account the existence of these lakes and rivers , which would have had a major influence on the regional climate .
30 One can not quite understand the process of informalisation in European countries if one does not take into account that here too one can observe upward movements of working-class traditions and downward movements of middle-class traditions of conduct , although it is not possible to speak of the emergence of a new more firmly established code of conduct .
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