Example sentences of "[vb mod] [not/n't] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Their peace must not in any way be disturbed .
2 The private practice must not in any way impinge on national health service commitments .
3 For my part , I do not see why the trial judge should not at that stage state in open court what that advice will be .
4 I WOULD just like to assure Raymond Campbell that he should not for one moment think that Glentoran fans will be upset about his move to Linfield .
5 I have come to the conclusion that the temples of the idols in England should not on any account be destroyed .
6 In the processes of Parliament there will be much consideration whether a Bill should or should not in one form or another become an enactment .
7 The English king was , and remained , stubbornly deaf to the point crucial to the Scots : that the marriage of Mary and Edward should not in any way endanger Scottish independence .
8 We stressed , however , that the inclusion of drama methods in English should not in any way replace drama as a subject for specialist study .
9 Thus the DH comments in Caring for People about the relationship of services to those who can not afford their full cost is particularly relevant : ‘ In practice many consumers of personal social services can not afford the full cost of the service and ability to pay does not , and should not in any way influence decisions on the service to be provided . ’
10 The term ‘ high-bay ’ should not in any way be confused with the term ‘ high-pile ’ as described in the 29th edition of the Fire Offices ' Committee Sprinkler Rules .
11 The system should not in any way restrict the contribution of any of the members of the team ; it should enhance their efforts by providing routine channels for the routine aspects of their activities , so that they are not obliged to devote intellectual effort to them .
12 This can find expression in ‘ I must get him to make a will before he dies ’ — a basic desire to get things sorted out — and may extend to attempts to resolve family quarrels , an anxiety that the sun should not in this case go down fur ever on wrath .
13 What I find very frightening is the campaign by Sir Thomas Hetherington in particular who erm as reported in the newspapers has said that there are er a handful , 3 or 4 people whom he has singled out , and he says the evidence is prima facie evidence against them , is so overwhelming that the law of England must be radically changed in order to bring a prosecution against them , and , as Lord Shawcroft said , well how , in such circumstances , could such people have a fair trial when we 've had the er Hetherington the former Attorney General saying , in effect , we know these people are guilty , we 're changing the law to prosecute them , and now you members of the jury must n't on any account er think er in er you must judge completely impartially .
14 ‘ I should n't in any case keep the originals and the transcripts in one place , no sir .
15 In fact , you should n't in this instance , because the case itself asks for an answer divided into two main sections .
16 While these two viewpoints may not at first sight appear to be strikingly different , they do in fact embody two quite opposing ways of approaching the discipline .
17 Similar problems may also be experienced when an accounting reference period is changed , since s 225(6) of the CA1985 provides that : ‘ An accounting reference period may not in any case ( exception if administration order is in force ) be extended so as to exceed 18 months and a notice under this section is ineffective if the current or previous accounting reference period as extended in accordance with the notice would exceed that limit . ’
18 Though what it was that she knew , she could not at that moment have said .
19 While Davidge could not at that time be more specific , he observed , ‘ the appointment of Sir Anthony is intended to stimulate discussion and to help us rexamine all existing and potential services ’ .
20 The court which would normally have taken cognizance was that over which the lord presided ; and although it was in the lord 's court that the vassal made his defiance , it was usually done , not in person , but by messenger or herald , and the vassal could not at that stage accept any ruling of the court .
21 He could not at that stage hope to fulfil this role himself .
22 It went to the extent of stating , ‘ … the TUC could not at any stage commit itself in advance to approve or acquiesce in the methods to be adopted to reach full employment simply because those methods can be shown to be well fitted and even necessary to the achievement of that objective …
23 Moreover , he had written it on pages that he could not at this moment tear up into big pieces and then into smaller pieces .
24 But they could not at this point publicly repudiate him .
25 ‘ … it shall be defence for the person charged to prove that he did not know , and could not with reasonable diligence have ascertained , that the goods did not conform to the description or that the description had been applied to the goods . ’
26 In any proceedings for an offence under this Act of supplying or offering to supply goods to which a false trade description is applied it shall be a defence for the person charged to prove that he did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have ascertained , that the goods did not conform to the description or that the description had been applied to the goods .
27 Under the special defence , the issue is whether the defendant did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered , the false trade description .
28 Their appellate jurisdiction was also extended , presumably by agreement between the Inns and the judges , to issues relating to disputes over property within the Inns : Rakestraw v. Brewer ( 1728 ) 2 P.Wms. 511 , or over elections in the Inns : Inner Temple v. Ince ( 1677 ) 3 Keble 835 , or over debts due to the Inns : Levinz v. Randolph ( 1700 ) 1 Ld.Raym. 594 , which could not by any stretch of the imagination relate to the duties of judges in relation to the administration of justice in their courts .
29 It could not by any stretch of the imagination be anything else .
30 ‘ I could not in good conscience tell people to buy disposable diapers . ’
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