Example sentences of "not [be] [verb] for [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It may be argued that because the affective domain deals with qualitative differences it can not be planned for in the same systematic way that is applied to knowledge , and that it is best dealt with by providing suitable models , and by discussion when problems and student needs arise .
2 However , following use of a weed killer on the lawn , earthworms should not be collected for at least four weeks from this site .
3 Find a quiet , well-ventilated room with pleasant surroundings if possible , where you will not be disturbed for at least fifteen minutes .
4 There were no relevant standing rules governing applications for declarations and injunctions before the enactment of rule 3(7) because before then these remedies could not be applied for under Order 53 , but only in private actions .
5 In this country a hospital accepts and cares for any person who can not be cared for in their own home , but to step into their admission halls is not always the loving experience needed .
6 Some members of the Committee moved that the school stay open , on the grounds that short-term financial gain would not be compensated for by the long-term loss to the community .
7 Lawyers are now reconsidering the wording of a part of the guidance and it will not be published for at least another week .
8 And the implications of that can not be catered for by opinion polls .
9 Up to 1980 the supplementary benefit regulations permitted claimants in residential homes who could not be catered for by the local authority an amount sufficient to meet reasonable board and lodging charges in the area .
10 Property remained the precondition of political rights , and Ireton 's argument at Putney that " liberty can not be provided for in a general sense , if property [ is to ] be preserved " ( p. 73 ) was accepted by the ruling property-owners as a necessary truth of politics .
11 Problems of a non-recurring and non-foreseeable nature can not be provided for in a book of rules and procedures .
12 Does it indicate that the meaning of an idiom can not be inferred from ( or , more precisely , can not be accounted for as a compositional function of ) the meanings the parts carry IN THAT EXPRESSION ?
13 The definition must be understood as stating that an idiom is an expression whose meaning can not be accounted for as a compositional function of the meanings its parts have when they are not parts of idioms .
14 But there are other problems : for there re aspects of sentence-meaning which , at least on truth-conditional r other narrow semantic theories , can not be accounted for within semantic theory .
15 Between 1952 and 1976 , more than two million urban jobs were lost that can not be accounted for in terms of national trends influencing unfavourable urban structures ( Danson , Lever and Malcolm , 1980 ) .
16 Attention is drawn to the statement in TR794 that ‘ the tax consequences of pensions can not be accounted for in isolation from potential deferred tax effects from other sources ' , as , for example , ‘ deferred tax arising from sources other than pensions may enhance the prospective recoverability of tax arising in respect of pension payments ’ .
17 He suggests that to attribute extra suffering to one particular factor — age , length of unemployment , marital status , etc. — is too crude , as is the emphasis on individual responsibility ; the gross disparities between the numbers of jobs and the numbers of those seeking jobs can not be accounted for in terms of the individual psychological characteristics of the latter , nor can the rapid changes in the former .
18 We have seen how our feeling that a particular stretch of language in some way hangs together , or has unity , ( that it is , in other words , discourse ) , can not be accounted for in the same way as our feeling for the acceptability of a sentence .
19 This supposition made the marriage bar popular in the press , and accounted for the weakness of an occupational group such as married women teachers , whose position could not be accounted for in terms of lower levels of skill or poor unionisation .
20 The differences between chimpanzees and us can not be accounted for by differences in these proteins .
21 He says : ‘ Tinnitus ( Latin for ringing ) is the name given to the subjective ( heard only by the person concerned ) experience of hearing sounds in the ear or head which have no basis of reality in the environment , that is to say , the sound can not be accounted for by vibrations coming from objects external to the patient . ’
22 But it is equally clear that its nature can not be accounted for by demonstrating its rules by a random use of any lexical items that come to mind .
23 Since this high work of fracture — which makes trees able to stand up to the buffetings of life and which makes wood such a useful material — can not be accounted for by any of the recognized work of fracture mechanisms which operate in man-made composites , George set out to find out what was really happening .
24 Since the Unemployed Flow Survey reported no significant difference between men and women in this respect , the variation in the results obtained from the Cohort Study can not be accounted for by its concentration on men .
25 The above average rates of leukaemia in the study area can not be accounted for by these findings .
26 Despite Government counter-claims that this increase is due to 1986 changes in definitions of accidents from minor to major and fatal categories , all the increases can not be accounted for by the redefinition .
27 Some constructs may reflect pre-verbal bases of organization which can not be accounted for by rational explanation .
28 Importantly , the difference in concordance rates could not be accounted for by the different concordance rates for alcoholism alone .
29 The significant difference at 45 and 360 minutes postprandially between the results in the normal and these two morbidly obese subjects can not be accounted for by a difference in the urine output ( one way ANOVA , p>0.05 ) .
30 Changes in output which can not be accounted for by changes in the input of capital and labour are assumed to be accounted for by autonomous shocks in technology .
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