Example sentences of "necessarily [vb infin] to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 A charter party did not necessarily attest to the ownership of the goods shipped because the charterer might not have been a shipper , but merely a lessor of space .
2 Well , as a sonic snapshot that might be true , but it does n't necessarily transfer to a musician playing live , in anger , and across the gamut of dynamics that a night 's performance involves .
3 Those that carry the same names as overseas beers are produced under licence and do not necessarily adhere to the recipe or strength of the original .
4 It has been argued , falsely I believe ( 22 ) , that investment in this sector of agriculture , as has occurred in the lowlands , will necessarily lead to a fall in the rural population .
5 The transformation of the problematic does not necessarily lead to a transformation of the form of validity of knowledge .
6 Professor Chapman points out that this does not necessarily lead to a drop in standards of physical care , but stresses the apparent risk that patients may occasionally be made to feel ‘ merely an appendage to a machine ’ .
7 A Halifax spokesman stressed the £20m provision on loans to the Kentish development Burrell 's Wharf was highly prudent and would not necessarily lead to a loss of the same magnitude .
8 Restricting car access does not necessarily lead to a loss of trade .
9 He reaffirmed the belief he held then , that the use of soft drugs did not necessarily lead to a progression to hard drugs , although he conceded that he would never have encountered any other drug if he had not become involved with smoking marijuana .
10 To abandon ‘ news values ’ as the sole criteria of the media would not necessarily lead to a dereliction of duty .
11 Sympathy with the conditions of the poor did not necessarily lead to a desire for reform by the state but for further voluntary action .
12 The course writer 's patterning , whether overt or covert , does not necessarily lead to the patterning he intends the learner to produce .
13 It might even come to be accepted that the discovery of flaws in the original investigation need not necessarily lead to the dropping of charges but may , instead , strengthen the case against the suspect through discovery of fresh evidence or by plugging of gaps in the original investigation .
14 The government had the right to control private investment in the interests of society , and Courtauld agreed with Beveridge that to surrender this freedom would not necessarily lead to the erosion of others .
15 As neither an exchange rate union , nor an intercirculation union , nor a parallel currency union would necessarily lead to the Community 's complete monetary integration , these forms of monetary union are inconsistent with the objectives of the Single European Act .
16 I does not necessarily lead to an increase in the price of consumer goods .
17 Thus birth control groups during the inter-war period were careful to argue that the use of birth control would not necessarily lead to an increase in childlessness or very small families , but rather would result in better planned families and healthier mothers and children .
18 It does not , of course , follow that because markets are of only limited effectiveness that legal intervention , in the shape of a more active liability regime or a reformed governance structure , would necessarily lead to an outcome closer to the ideal , since the costs of intervention may exceed the benefits .
19 In Island Export and Finance Ltd v Umunna [ 1986 ] BCLC 460 it was held that a director 's fiduciary duty did not necessarily come to an end when he ceased to be a director .
20 However its findings do not necessarily point to the inevitability of NT on sheer merit , but because of the marketing clout Microsoft is credited with having .
21 Whereas Aristotle did not enquire into the mental process by which we perceive time , because he believed that our minds must necessarily conform to the time of the physical universe , St Augustine took the mind 's activity as the basis of temporal measurement .
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