Example sentences of "nor [vb past] it [vb infin] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Nor did it threaten London 's long-term position among the world 's main financial centres . |
2 | He argued that the public did not stand at the box-office window and demand dramas with happy endings or which mixed pathos and humour , nor did it demand comedy made up of ‘ slapstick ’ , ‘ gags ’ with ‘ three or so dashes of serious situation and a bit of irony to top off ’ . |
3 | The package itself did not control the line , nor did it tell operators and management what action to take when things went wrong . |
4 | The Realpolitik of Berlin detached the definition of the new Germany from Germanism — it did not include all Germans nor did it exclude non-Germans . |
5 | Nor did it help Ford that many of his junior officers and a good third of his rankers had seen far more fighting then he had himself . |
6 | Even the date of the battle was not wholly fortuitous ; nor did it lack significance for those who fought in it . |
7 | Nor did it need riots to provoke these swan-songs for the old traditions . |
8 | Nor did it assist macroeconomlc management . |
9 | Back at the Conservative Party conference in Blackpool , Nigel Lawson 's carefully worded oratory did little to satisfy those wanting Britain to become full members of the European Monetary System sooner rather than later , nor did it provide comfort for others claiming that interest rates had reached their zenith . |
10 | Nor did it allow families to get the car very close to the house as they preferred to do . |
11 | It had no business goodwill and was not permitted to trade ; nor did it have shareholders ; ( 5 ) in failing to take proper account of the fact that it logically followed that if a local government corporation could sue for libel in respect of its governing reputation then so too could any institution of central government ( including , for example , a government department which was a statutory corporation such as the Department of the Environment ) ; ( 6 ) in the premises in considering that there was no uncertainty or ambiguity in English law in relation to the extent to which local authorities might sue for libel . |
12 | It did not look at rape as a social problem nor did it have regard to the difficulties which rape poses for the criminal justice system . |