Example sentences of "[noun] not [adv] [verb] [prep] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ If , in any case not expressly provided for by this Act , a liability to any duty , or any authority or power , not incident to the administration of justice in any court , whose jurisdiction is transferred by this Act to the High Court of Justice , shall have been imposed or conferred by any statute , law , or custom upon the judges or any judge of any of such courts , save as hereinafter mentioned , every judge of the said High Court shall be capable of performing and exercising , and shall be liable to perform and empowered to exercise every such duty , authority , and power , in the same manner as if this Act had not passed , and as if he had been duly appointed the successor of a judge liable to such duty , or possessing such authority or power , before the passing of this Act . … |
2 | ‘ War and rape are two activities not widely engaged in by women . ’ |
3 | In-depth exploration of a kind not usually catered for in video or ordinary television transmissions . |
4 | Consequential savings of approximately £3bn could then be used to assist vulnerable groups not adequately provided for at present . |
5 | A new Jump Pattern has been worked out and some new races created specifically for horses whose optimum trip is two and a half miles , a distance not previously catered for at championship level both over hurdles and fences , although there will still be nothing for novice chasers over that distance at the Cheltenham Festival . |
6 | Established under the 1981 Broadcasting Act , Channel 4 had a statutory obligation to ‘ contain a suitable proportion of matter calculated to appeal to tastes and interests not generally catered for by ITV . ’ |
7 | Furthermore , it had to regulate it in such a way as to ensure that it would ‘ contain a suitable proportion of matter calculated to appeal to tastes and interests not generally catered for by Service 1 ( i.e. ITV 1 ) ’ . |
8 | The Act formalizes certain procedures not expressly provided for in the Treaty of Rome . |
9 | Second , she has not only cleaned up her act , she seems to have adopted a remarkably apt late twentieth-century camouflage : from Baltic peasant to stereotypical dyke 's delight is a transition not normally catered for in those women 's magazines that offer readers new looks for new lifestyles . |