Example sentences of "[not/n't] take account [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 But you do not take account of the consumption value these improvements have for your neighbours .
2 It does not take account of the timing of the outlays and proceeds .
3 It does not take account of the timing of the outlays and proceeds .
4 It now seems that only in those cases where there is no identity of interest will the problem of other businesses gaining the benefit of a restrictive covenant be at all important and the courts will not take account of the doctrine of incorporation or of privity of contract if such an identity exists .
5 A system based solely on attendance does not take account of the range of a councillor 's duties ; leaves some councillors better off than others ( depending on their employment situation ) ; and does not adequately reflect the added responsibility carried by senior councillors .
6 If a dispute arises , a court will probably not take account of the layout in construing the contract , although it may take account of headings and/or marginal notes .
7 There was also criticism that SMRs did not take account of the health-care costs of social deprivation .
8 These calculations do not take account of the value of the long term assurance business .
9 However , this does not take account of the importance of decisions and amongst the research families , there was widespread agreement about which decisions were important and which were not .
10 Of course , the stressed representations do not take account of the distribution of sentence stress in the utterances .
11 He suggested that women are by nature passive and therefore less inclined to crime than men — although such a suggestion does not take account of the fact that by no means all crimes involve violence .
12 However , this does not take account of the fact that some of the housing stock will be vacant for frictional reasons , or because of government policy , or its unattractiveness , or use as second homes : furthermore , some dwellings may be unfit , lacking amenities or requiring substantial repairs — in England alone two million had at least one of these physical problems in 1981 ( English House Condition Survey , 1982 , p. 3 ) .
13 But these statistics do not take account of the fact that , in continuous speech , word boundaries are more difficult to identify from a given mid-class string compared with a phonemic string .
14 It does not take account of the fact that in the most intense form of fiduciary relationship , that between trustee and beneficiary , it is possible to modify the " no profit " and " no conflict " rules in the trust deed or with the assent of the beneficiaries .
15 In a more explicitly theoretical paper , Lavandera ( 1982 ) presents the general argument that syntactic variation can be studied only at a superficial level if the analytic method does not take account of the use which speakers make of variation for stylistic and discourse purposes ; frequently they exploit subtle differences in meaning of the kind which ( for example ) Weiner and Labov deliberately simplify .
16 It is what is called a classical theory ; that is , it does not take account of the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics , as it should for consistency with other theories .
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