Example sentences of "not [adv] [verb] [noun] in " in BNC.
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1 | However , there are clear baseline differences in disease severity between groups and the analysis did not properly address differences in response between treatments . |
2 | Hence those who take a floating charge from a company which can not be proved to be solvent , and which does not survive for a further year , can not thereby obtain protection in respect to their existing debts , but only to the extent that they provide the company with new value and thus increase the assets available for other creditors . |
3 | This implies that variations in CL intensity need not necessarily reflect changes in bulk pore fluid composition . |
4 | Seniority does not necessarily denote competence in all procedures . |
5 | Though the technology that telecoms and computer firms use is similar , success in telecoms services does not necessarily bring success in the computer , or telecoms-hardware , business . |
6 | Even an ideal concept of income or consumption does not necessarily represent differences in opportunity sets ; and when we allow for the deviation of observable income , or consumption , from the ideal measure , the problems become still more severe . |
7 | The scene does not necessarily present Brutus in an unfavourable light . |
8 | However , not all languages have a grammatical category of number , and those that do do not necessarily view countability in the same terms . |
9 | Determinism in principle does not necessarily imply predictability in practice . |
10 | This freedom did not necessarily find expression in forms which were in conflict with the ruling patrician elite . |
11 | I fear that this has not necessarily taken place in every case . |
12 | However , a high score does not necessarily predict success in a high level job . |
13 | Stoddart uses a rate of rainwater solution of emerged reef limestones of 10–20 mm ( 0.4–0.8 in ) per 1000 years and suggests that this is not enough to destroy reefs in glacial periods , the last of which he reckons to have lasted 60 000 years . |
14 | But a jackpot of £2,350,000 was not enough to keep Kirkley in a job . |
15 | Underground nuclear tests not only cause displacement in the earth , they also cause landslides , earthquakes , floods , typhoons , hurricanes and tidal waves , according to Ikram Karimov , deputy director of the Azerbaijani Institute of Geology . |
16 | The study not only describes changes in central-local relationships but it also attempts to explain them . |
17 | The exhibition will not only show life in Bentley during the past 150 years , but also that of Froyle , concentrating on the development of both village schools , culminating in their merger in 1986 . |
18 | The same phrase had been translated and mordantly placed by Dante in Canto XXX of the Purgatorio ; and so , when Hardy in these poems confronts the shade of his recently deceased and estranged wife Emma , not only does Aeneas in Aeneid 6 confront the reproachfully haughty ghost of Dido , but Dante 's pilgrim confronts for the first time the shade or apparition of his lost Beatrice . |
19 | Also in this category , but published for the first time in this volume , is the article Jackie And Just Seventeen which not only records changes in the content of girls ' magazines over the 80s ( since McRobbie 's original analysis of the late 70s , also included here ) but registers theoretical developments as well through its attention to the ways in which girls as readers both construct their own meanings and interact with the texts . |
20 | Of course they not only reflect ageism in society but help to reinforce it and make it acceptable . |
21 | Hence variations in mortality not only indicate variations in morbidity but also variations in the great need for services in caring for those with conditions with a high number of deaths . |
22 | The campaign 's apparent failures not only caused tensions in Central Office , they were reflected in the polls . |
23 | He not only has room in his science for God ; he tries to create God using only some laws of physics , some simplifying assumptions , some outrageous extrapolations , and truly cosmic gall . |
24 | The Law Society considers that the Law Commission 's proposals will have a significant practical application , not only to solve problems in relation to incapacitated people , but also to provide ways in which potential conflicts or disputes can be avoided . |
25 | This not only boosted confidence in the sentencer 's own unique ability to reach the right result ( Parker et al. , 1999 : ch. 5 ) , but also emphasized the inviolability of the sentencing function in the face of perceived interference from outside . |
26 | Some languages are peculiar to one region , yet intimately related to others beyond — like the 500 or so Austronesian tongues which not only link speakers in Vietnam and Cambodia with those in Fiji , Malaysia , the Philippines , Sulawesi and Borneo , but also reach out to the inland mountains of Taiwan , the North Island of New Zealand , and to the speakers of Dobu in the d'Entrecasteaux islands and of Trukese on Truk . |
27 | Training of users is also an issue and , helpfully , BT BIS has taken the line that their natural user group , the smaller firms , not only need training in how to use the system — which is , after all , not terribly difficult — but also in what the information available can be used for and , to some extent , how to use it . |
28 | Those candidates exercise their freedoms and I defend those freedoms — If the freedoms which Conservative Members say they want to uphold were so widespread , they would not only define freedom in terms of the power to own shares in a company but would seek to defend it in terms of being able to get a job in that company , in a country with getting on for 2.5 million unemployed . |
29 | This not only provides flexibility in the use of man-power , it also improves communication . |
30 | Caterpillars of geometrid moths not only resemble twigs in the colour and texture of their skin , but they grasp a thin branch with their hind claspers and hold themselves up at an angle so that they look like twigs . |