Example sentences of "n't [adv] [vb infin] with [det] " in BNC.

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1 Like the inner London boroughs that were , and the Inner London Education Authority which adopted an extremely dictatorial attitude — well that 's all right , I do n't necessarily disagree with that — but a very a very expensive attitude with it .
2 Erm I mean I would n't necessarily agree with all these markings because everybody who marks the markings are sometimes slightly different .
3 So a statement such as ‘ Lots of parents have different views about their children ’ or ‘ I wonder if there are times when you do n't totally agree with each other ? ’ may enable this to happen .
4 ‘ My mother could n't possibly cope with that great big house of yours , ’ she said .
5 ‘ He did n't always agree with some of the things in modern tennis , but he was never stuck in the past . ’
6 We must n't ever bother with that .
7 Yes , as you say , I was n't in the Cabinet so I ca n't really speak with any authority at all about how he conducted affairs there .
8 I could n't really cope with this separation , despite that fact that we live only about a minute from the SCBU .
9 And then you 've got different colours that do n't really go with that , but
10 You ca n't really argue with that , can you ? ’
11 You ca n't really argue with that can you ?
12 I do n't really agree with that .
13 Sometimes the thoughts and feelings I had did n't really agree with each other , so I decided I must be lots of different people inside my brain .
14 I do n't really agree with this kind of thing
15 oh that tie does n't even go with that suit , look at that , brown tie with a blue suit get this into ya , ha , ha
16 Do I detect then that the general feeling is that we should n't even tamper with this .
17 Yet , even here , there is a puzzle , a strange , unplaceable something which does n't quite fit with that account of the gradual driving out of the reader and the suggestion of a steady shift towards the rare and the difficult , for I would guess that anyone not put off in advance by suspicion or hearsay , anyone that is who has got as far as dipping into Ulysses , say , will have come hard up against things that are startlingly , even discomfortingly , recognisable .
18 And he ca n't erm he ca n't quite live with that .
19 And then we 'll have to deal with that other one and er and , and resolve that one way or the other and make , make sure we 've done that reasonably reasonably quickly , either g sending her back to new business or er trying to find another position for her if she ca n't actually cope with that .
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