Example sentences of "has not [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 BRIGHTON : In six verbose years as leader of his party , Neil Kinnock has not a memorable phrase to his credit .
2 The answer to this question has not a few repercussions in the social world that sociologists study — often for purely secular reasons .
3 It is clear that the Secretary of State has not a single idea on the issue .
4 Entering the depths of the mind can be extremely dangerous if the would-be mystic has not the mental or physical capacity for this interior quest .
5 Has not the Prime Minister managed to get the worst of all worlds by vetoing what he should have accepted — the social upgrading that we all want — and by half accepting what he should have vetoed — economic and monetary union , which will be deeply damaging and which will lock both this country and Europe into a decade of deflation ?
6 The return to my house is strained by the thought that he still has not the faintest idea where he is going .
7 Although Mr Melding , a first-time candidate , has not the faintest chance of winning , he is reluctant to dwell gloomily on the fact .
8 If you then say , ah well it might expand to double that number or to five thousand , as was postulated , that then begs an even larger question , because in my submission you would then go back and revisit the alternatives of , for example , should you expand Tadcaster , which has not the best facilities in its town centre , er to quote but one example of er viability and sustainability of towns .
9 ( It may be noted that erection can occur in younger — sometimes much younger — boys ; but it has not the Same significance . )
10 Every golfer in the world experiences that awful feeling of helplessness when he stands over a putt and knows that he has not the slightest chance of getting the ball near the hole , let alone into it .
11 The hon. Gentleman is really behaving disgracefully — — when he accuses British Rail of negligence before an inquiry has even begun , and when he has not the slightest idea of what caused that accident .
12 However , one has not the slightest doubt that the moving spirits behind the coaches ' gathering will have been England 's Geoff Cooke and Australia 's Bob Dwyer .
13 Has not the Labour-controlled local authority frequently made proposals for reorganisations , knowing that they would be rejected because they were highly partisan ?
14 If you say that the Nationalists of Ireland have a right to claim to go out of the united Kingdom as a community if you say that five or six per cent of the whole of the United Kingdom have that right because they wish to have separate rule for themselves , how can you say that a body in Ireland , not five or six per cent , but twenty-five per cent of the whole population , has not an equal right to separate treatment ?
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