Example sentences of "not to [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The only case to apply this approach to the running of covenants is Boyer v Warbey [ 1953 ] 1 QB 234 , in which Denning LJ stated : " I know that before the Judicature Act 1873 , it was said that the doctrine of covenants running with the land only applied to covenants under seal and not to agreements under hand …
2 They have these enormous canine teeth again stabbing each other and the thick blubber round the neck again as a defence and if the canines go in they go into the blubber and not to arteries and stuff like that .
3 Difficulty had been experienced in making the previous law work , because it depended on the need to prove a particular act of distribution , not to members of a club or association of which the defendant himself was a member .
4 As for the glamour attached to some jobs and not to others : forget it , it 's a sham .
5 As Mrs Parvis had explained to Gloria when they first arrived , ‘ I 'm in no position to go showing no favouritisms to some and not to others .
6 They raise questions about the notion that it guarantees a common curricular entitlement in so far as they yield teaching strategies which are applied to children classified as having learning difficulties , but not to others .
7 One could hypothesise that there is some phonological clue to ethnicity in this speaker 's speech which is apparent to members of the black community but not to others .
8 The defence applies only to retailers and not to others in the distribution chain who can rely upon another defence of general application under s39 , namely , " due diligence " .
9 Its conclusion is that there are no mistakes whatever in it , and , if any apparent mistakes are found , this must be due to our interpretation and not to problems in the text .
10 In Patterson v. McLean Credit Union the court had ruled that an 1866 Civil Rights law prohibiting discrimination in making a contract applied " only to the formation of a contract , but not to problems that may arise later " .
11 The monetary approach affords primacy not to goods and services as such , but rather to the demand and supply of money ( real balances ) .
12 Alternating periods of flood and drought are not to the liking of any plant , certainly not to roses .
13 It explicitly reversed the accepted Catholic teaching which related freedom only to truth and not to persons , claiming that error had no rights .
14 That Committee , and the CDP itself , took issue with the proposal to authorize internal validation related to specific subject areas and not to institutions as a whole .
15 In the UK , in 1984 a bill was introduced in parliament seeking legal safeguards to ensure that computerised personal health data about patients is available only to health professionals and not to groups such as the police , tax authorities , industry , and social services personnel .
16 Apart from being false , such an account leaves no room in our thinking about children for things like teaching and learning , or development in understanding and character and all those other concepts which refer to processes and not to states .
17 As for articles 52 and 221 , in as much as they refer to establishment and participation in capital , they can in any event apply only to persons and not to ships .
18 It was wonderful to be able to listen to her favourite song with impunity , extraordinary that it should still have the power to move her , but not to tears .
19 They can not be fixed in advance but are conditional on context because they relate not to sentences but to utterances .
20 Since meaning is a matter of observational consequences , and such consequences belong to theories and not to sentences , Quine 's conclusion becomes inevitable : meaning belongs to theories rather than to sentences .
21 The argument rests in part on the pervasive nature of deixis ( see Chapter 2 below ) in natural languages , for sentences like ( II ) are true or false only relative to contextual parameters , thanks to the fact that I , now and the tense of am are variables given specific values only on particular occasions of utterance ( i.e. ( II ) is true only when spoken by certain speakers , those who are sixty-three , or true of individuals only at certain times , when they are sixty-three ) : ( 11 ) I am now sixty-three years old These facts seem to establish that truth conditions must be assigned to utterances , i.e. sentences with their associated contexts of utterance , not to sentences alone ( or , if one likes , truth conditions include context conditions ) .
22 You may also have to state facts which are obvious to you , but not to cousins who have not seen the family for several years .
23 That it was addressed to teachers and their employers and not to governors or parents mattered less when the report was published than it would now .
24 The section applies to ‘ presenters ’ and ‘ directors , ’ but not to actors unless the latter depart from the script , in which case they become ‘ directors ’ for the purposes of the Act .
25 Similarly , but on a lesser scale — although still very big — the Californian earthquakes of San Francisco and Owens Valley were due to crustal movement and not to volcanoes .
26 Secondly , much of the available data relate , not to women , but to the households in which they live .
27 Not to strangers , but to the business , Doreen , especially when you already have an adequate room , ’ he pointed out wearily .
28 The corresponding provision in the 1959 Act was considered to apply only to vacancies arising in the course of the term of office of a member , and not to vacancies caused by the completion of a term of office ( Brown v. Cameron , 19101 S.i.T .
29 It requires that we look not to things , not to the world , but instead to the validity of what we know about things or the world … .
30 Any inadequacy in the match between an articulated research programme and observational data is to be attributed , not to assumptions that constitute the hard core , but to some other part of the theoretical structure .
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