Example sentences of "[not/n't] [adv] for [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In the end even that was not enough for continued survival .
2 However , examples of this kind are so few that they indicate only a slight tendency ( possibly confined to some pre-sonorant environments ) , which is not enough for /a/ backing to be discussed as a stereotype .
3 Sometimes it 's not enough for environmental health officers to check out reports on their own — they need police help to get partygoers to quieten down .
4 It is not enough for one party or the other to tell us what his mind is , that he must do in person .
5 It is not enough for this justification to be expressed in terms of a linguist 's model of language or language use : it must be expressed with reference to the professional needs of teachers and the learning needs of children .
6 These results are in contrast with the New York Case Control Study which showed that cholesterol values in patients with advanced colorectal carcinomas were significantly different from those of controls ; this was not so for early disease .
7 HMIs fulfil both of these conditions , but this is not so for local authority inspectors .
8 This document is significant not only for New Testament studies .
9 It is important for the Opposition to bear it in mind that their opposition to the roads programme is a recipe not only for increased congestion but for increased fatalities and casualties on our roads .
10 However the increasingly open and competitive markets of the EC , USA and Japan present a special challenge , not only for locally-based exporting companies but also for those whose sales are restricted to the UK market .
11 Apart from certain exceptional cases , a trustee is entitled to no remuneration for his trouble , unless the terms of the trust so direct , and is liable not only for dishonest dealing with the trust property , but for all loss due either to non-observance of the directions in the settlement and the general rules of law , or to failure on his part to act up to the high standard of care which equity and statute law require of him .
12 For Mrs Thatcher , at loggerheads with many of her own party over European issues , this summit was crucial , as it set the tone for debates leading up to 1992 — not only for European unification but for the next British election in which Europe will be a deciding factor .
13 Resource allocation in the near future requires accurate information not only for each school but within a school for each year .
14 A striking feature of the campaign is the firm grasp voters seem to have of the main issues , and the shrewdness and acumen they show in arguing not only for one side or the other but for all sides at once .
15 To add to AW 's existing range of products a number of high quality and complementary brands of beer with the capacity not only for regional development but also rapid national development through AW 's marketing network .
16 In a time of economic recession such as that of the early 1990s , there is a strong case not only for low interest rates but also for increased public expenditure , especially on roads , bridges , airports and other civic needs , and on unemployment compensation and welfare payments , all to employ or protect the unemployed and those otherwise adversely affected .
17 I prefer to use the voice to stun , not only for that reason , but also because it is almost always immediately available .
18 Under the Brady plan , hard-up countries which carry out structural economic reforms that meet the approval of the International Monetary Fund qualify not only for partial debt forgiveness by the banks but also , in some cases , for new money .
19 During the 1970s both daily papers showed a heavy reliance on foreign material , and not only for non-African news .
20 Remember that you are reading not only for historical information but also to increase your historical understanding .
21 The plans allowed not only for considerable retrenchment of the mental hospital facilities , but also for the possibility that resettling long-stay patients would prove difficult and that more modern on-site village-style accommodation might be required .
22 Although in the case of learning disabilities he accepted that he was dealing with congenital conditions incapable of radical improvement , his regimen called not only for humane treatment but also for an appreciation that disabled people deserved special understanding because of their superior spiritual status .
23 On his six-week tour of the provinces in August and September 1858 , the tsar encountered a spectrum of opinions which ranged from Tver " on the left , where Unkovskii was at least as radical as Nikolai Miliutin , to Nizhnii Novgorod on the right , where the local gentry wanted serfs to pay not only for any property which they received in the event of emancipation , but even for the freedom of their bodies ( which the gentry did not own ) .
24 He was dignified , he was knowledgeable , and he obviously had great feeling not only for British art but all kinds of art .
25 The evolution of human ego-structures is of immense significance not only for psychoanalytic ego-psychology but also for the principal subject of this book : namely , the psychopathology of our times and its relation to the cultural , economic and psychological evolution of our species .
26 These studies are important not only for recurrent stone disease but also because a knowledge of gall stone recurrence is likely to provide valuable clues about the pathogenesis and treatment of primary gall stone disease .
27 That balance is achieved best with the presence of both role models , not only for psychosexual stability , but also for the learning process of which harmonious and healthy conflict management is a part .
28 Not only for this moment
29 many times , not only for this group but for another one .
30 Extensive grassland based systems are especially sparing of energy use ( 14 ) and could well assume an increasing importance not only for this reason but also because the rate of expansion of production has now declined to around 2% per annum in lowland agriculture and may not increase ( 15 ) .
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