Example sentences of "[conj] he does not [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 Galbraith 's views have been widely criticised , most frequently on grounds of exaggeration , though it should be noted that he does not suggest that the revised sequence has replaced the accepted sequence , but that there is a complex inter-action between the two .
2 The right hon. Member for Birmingham , Sparkbrook ( Mr. Hattersley ) says that it will be at £36,000 , but the right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Monklands , East ( Mr. Smith ) will not tell us and says that he does not think that it is necessary to say so .
3 Professor Williams 's views on the proper scope of the crime of rape coupled with the limited role he advocates for the offence of procuring by threat suggest that he does not consider that the criminal law should be over-active in protecting the sexual autonomy of women .
4 Whatever Mustakimzade does think about the dating of Abdulkerim 's Muftilik , then , it is clear that he does not believe that he followed Molla Gurani .
5 He says that he does not accept that the new regulations , which will have the substantial effect of increasing pay , will lead to any costs .
6 He does not deny the existence of mind , and he does not deny that it is the province of mind to think and perceive .
7 Secondly , it is only right that your doctor should know , because if there is a significant change in your condition with homoeopathy , he will ascribe it to the wrong treatment if he does not know that other therapies have also been given .
8 ‘ Can a man be punished for breaking a law if he does not know that it exists ? ’
9 Lockwood accepts that clerical work is often divided up into separate departments , but he does not believe that this has led to deskilling .
10 At present , Josephson is unable to offer an explanation of psychic energy and its effects but he does not doubt that it is ‘ positive , a genuine phenomenon ’ .
11 The man who accepts authority is thus said to surrender his private or individual judgment because he does not insist that reasons be given that he can grasp and that satisfy him , as a condition of his obedience .
12 While he does not deny that they often speak in a manner that ‘ normal ’ people regard as metaphoric , he points out that poets are aware of the metaphoric nature of their linguistic productions , whereas schizophrenics are not ; they use what Rogers calls ‘ unlabelled metaphor ’ ( 1978:42 ) .
13 For he does not allow that there can be someone who genuinely asks himself what he should do in a moral way , but whose answer is in terms of what is only one of various logically coherent moralities .
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