Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [vb mod] not be [verb] in " in BNC.
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1 | Yet , I will go on to argue that black kids seriously involved in sport tend to be rather better placed academically than others who may not be immersed in sport . |
2 | So , if someone 's playing games well whatever games they are please stop it there are people , human beings involved here who should not be used in the political fashion that 's being used . |
3 | Since then safety work has pushed up that capacity and when the ( New Zealand ) All Blacks play there in three weeks it will be helped to 21,000 by a temporary stand erected over the Tanner Bank wall on the outfield of the adjacent cricket field , adding 2,300 spectators who need not be counted in the official figure . |
4 | ACFA membership is biased towards patients attending larger treatment centres where there is awareness of the cystic fibrosis trust , but it contains a substantial proportion of patients who would not be included in a study based on large clinics . |
5 | The role of the team leader is to support the village health worker in her activities by providing consultation , treatment that is beyond the skill of the village worker , and referral of patients who can not be treated in the village to the main health centre ( the third tier ) in Jamkhed which has facilities for diagnosis , acute care , in-patient treatment , and training . |
6 | Hilton 's mystical theology is not conveyed with the passionate poetry that characterises Rolle 's writing , it is not attended by the rigours of the Cloud-author 's sense of that transcendent God who can not be known in any recognisable sense of the word , the visionary experience of Julian of Norwich , or the endearingly unbalanced enthusiasm of Margery Kempe . |
7 | Officers have been guarding inmates who can not be accommodated in overcrowded jails following the riots at Strangeways jail in Manchester . |
8 | For this reason housing associations , as well as housing families , have tended to house people who are considered to have ‘ special needs ’ , in particular those who can not be housed in the traditional nuclear family unit . |