Example sentences of "not [adv] to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It looks the English breakfast fixing it up for , that 's what and if you , if you want to look at an X-ray , you will see that the arteries of the body , those are the arteries , bring the blood supply is blocked with arteriosclerosis , and there you can see the English breakfast , the yolk of egg , the butter and all these things that are in there , causing a blockage of the artery , not enough to that muscle , and a heart attack , death and all these unbelievable things , that give me a little bit of income .
2 If the present division is regarded as desirable , the next step is to ensure that the maximum penalty for the lesser offence is sufficient to deal with cases of serious threats which are not enough to negative consent in rape .
3 One senior representative of an existing cash & carry said that MAKRO will ‘ obviously pose a threat ’ , not only to that trade but also to supermarkets , which will be hit by trade being diverted into the MARKO ‘ discounting ’ — through holding one of the membership passports .
4 In the courses due recognition is given , not only to chemical theory , but to the importance of chemistry to research , development and production in industry .
5 In its origin [ Christianity ] presents to man and woman a glorious picture of sexual integrity : the Son of God who has become man and flesh , knowing from inside his Father 's work and perfecting it in the total self-giving of himself , not only of his spiritual but precisely also of his physical powers , giving not only to one individual but to all .
6 The new and sophisticated cable networks will open the way not only to new telecommunication services , but also to the spread of emerging technologies such as high definition television .
7 The book examines harmonisation of technical standards and the Community 's approach to harmonisation with particular reference not only to existing legislation but also proposed legislation .
8 These suggestions are relevant not only to human vision ( Ullman 's prime focus ) , but to animal vision also .
9 However , in the USA , the chemical fallout from industry and agriculture has prompted an environmental expert to warn of the many unseen air pollutants which are not covered by the Clean Air Act and are damaging not only to human health — linked to ills from leukaemia to heart disease — but are implicated in the formation of ‘ acid rain' which has devastated vast tracts of forest ( Begley , 1988 ) .
10 The allocation of resources to authorities must be linked not only to social need in terms of the levels of disability locally and the age and social class patterns of handicap and mental disorder , but also to the local costs of delivering that care .
11 The novelty and often the downright dishonesty of claims by royal clerks to livings which appeared to be legitimately filled already led not only to vigorous litigation , but even more seriously to insecurity , bitterness and local violence .
12 I wish to explore those proposals , lay bare the dangers which lurk beneath them and identify the threat not only to parliamentary representation from Scotland in this House but to the economic well-being of Scotland if the Labour party were ever in a position to exercise in Scotland the kind of powers that it would give to such an assembly .
13 It would be a very bad example not only to Czech society , but also to the wider art community ’ .
14 I think it can , as long as we realise the inadequacy of the simple linguistic model of communication ( addresser-message-addressee ) not only to literary discourse , but to any discourse .
15 The principles thus stated apply not only to national legislation which has been specifically adopted to implement a directive but also should only be applicable to any national legislation adopted after the directive .
16 Each stage in this series of attempts to consolidate the validity of the observation statement , ‘ Here is a piece of chalk ’ , involves an appeal not only to further observation statements but also to more theoretical generalizations .
17 Rather they rely not only to some extent upon judgement and intuition about the future , but also upon personal negotiations and bargaining between the executives , who may be competing with each other for scarce resources and may each be supporting their case with OR and economic models .
18 My right hon. and learned Friend the Secretary of State will take the case to his colleagues in the Council of Ministers and ask them to look again at the proposals , which would be damaging not only to British industry but to industries — including tourism — right across the Community .
19 There were no good rules and regulations , and hospitals and insurance companies felt that they ought not to sit down and make them because , once they made them , they were admitting that these things were taking place and that such decisions were being made and were subject not only to public scrutiny but a threat of medical malpractice suits .
20 What is known is that nearly 8000 young people leave care each year at 18 and many others at 16 and 17 , and are not provided with any semblance of the help and support which a good parent would give not only to these age groups but often to many young people of 19 , 20 or even older .
21 The so-called ‘ North-South drift ’ and ‘ urban-rural shift ’ have become particularly important issues over the past two decades , because with the slower rate of national population growth these forms of redistribution lead not only to relative decline but to an absolute fall in population numbers for many of the less dynamic areas .
22 This is relevant not only to informal interchange between students but also to tutorial discussion .
23 The new regulation which followed was a response not only to Big Bang , financial conglomerates and conflicts of interest , but was initially meant as a thorough overhaul of the regulation of the UK financial markets .
24 And of course another erm field is the effect of erm British and other rich country policies in aid and trade on countries overseas and what sort of policies are helpful to development — in a broad sense , not just to economic growth , but to social , political , as well as economic development of erm of overseas countries .
25 Some expert clauses have referred the issue not just to one expert but to two experts and an umpire .
26 In fact , and not just to all appearance , the Politburo was embarrassed by the KAL affair .
27 So the general point about this literature is that oppositional youth cultures amongst working class youth are still envisaged as closely linked not just to wider public values but to middle class public values .
28 The loss of their lands was a blow not just to episcopal prestige and income but also to episcopal management and the pastoral care of a diocese ; it can not have been reassuring to any bishop to see how often temporalities were at the risk of malicious accusation or expedient suspicion .
29 The British decision confirmed what had become increasingly apparent since 1958 , that the EEC was central not just to European integration , but to Western Europe as a whole , and that after 1957 the history of West European cooperation would centre upon the EEC , upon both its activities and the response to it by the other European states .
30 So he applied it erm more or less universally , not just to biological evolution and as Darwin had .
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