Example sentences of "that we [modal v] [not/n't] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 This is not to say that reading happens outside of the domain of politics , but that we ca n't easily conflate the two .
2 I suppose , ’ he said , ‘ that we ca n't just slip out now .
3 Leeds chairman Leslie Silver Wwednesday defended the controversial decision to sell Batty and said : ‘ No manager wants to sell his best players but Howard Wilkinson is practical enough to realise that we ca n't just buy other people 's best players — it works the other way round sometimes .
4 " The one thing we regret about the move is that we ca n't still get HTV .
5 There is another test that I want to refer to , that we ca n't actually do , because you have to be qualified to do this test , and it 's very , very complicated , and all the rest of it .
6 That centre for one of the staff who work there , make quite profound impact on the quality of life for many people living on our estates and I can not see anything more short sighted than denying access to the sorts of services and the sorts of pleasures that people can get from use of a community centre like that by cutting back on staffing so that we ca n't actually use the capital resources that we 've b the capital that we 've invested in facilities like that .
7 Even so , the world that we have to enter — the world of the solidly professional bourgeoisie and minor gentry of pre-1914 England — is so remote from us , so exotic , that we ca n't always keep our bearings .
8 And whether that was said or not , Wallace , the bald fact is that we would n't really need you any longer , would we ?
9 I knew at Becher 's second-time that we would not really get involved .
10 Just the hint of a vengeful smile accompanied the massage that we could n't just walk off with that there dog — we 'd have to take him to the parcels office and sign for him .
11 As long as we kid ourselves that we could not even imagine wanting to murder someone , for example , those murderous impulses will be acted out by others , as a mirror of our Shadow .
12 One distinguished scientist was so indignantly incredulous that he seized Galambos by the shoulders and shook him while complaining that we could not possibly mean such an outrageous suggestion .
13 We can at least begin to understand the human life and affection and anger and doubts and suffering and death of God in a way that we could not possibly begin to understand what it means for him to be God .
14 At the same time I think others , or the points she raises , erm , you know are good points and I do n't think that we should just my personal feeling is that we should n't just shelve it .
15 Do I detect then that the general feeling is that we should n't even tamper with this .
16 So I do n't know I just think it 's an extra little booking that we should n't really turn down cos it 's money we would n't normally get .
17 Enlightenment demands that we should not simply engage in the practices that are part of these rational pursuits ( submitting to their different forms of ‘ groundedness ’ ) , but that we should maintain our own integrity .
18 Embedded within discussions of human rights is the intention that we should not so organise our social institutions that they promote some people and inhibit others .
19 Another possibility that we can not categorically rule out is that an accelerating wind would have a higher column density than the constant velocity winds modelled here .
20 The consequence is that we can not just suppose that the text has been wrenched from its interdictal context and left unchanged , except for the addition of per omnia .
21 Thus , the exploration of a present-day divergent state of language resembles the exploration of a historically attested state to the extent that we can not successfully describe either of these in terms of an external ( and usually superordinate ) variety .
22 Kant answers the first questions by contending that we can not strictly speaking know that there is such a moral law .
23 That re-emphasises the fact that we can not simply talk about cancelling Trident .
24 They are not words for physical things , like objects or parts of the body , but for states or processes that we can not physically see or feel .
25 You will enter my machine , he wrote , and the trip will consist in the discovery that we can not even get started .
26 This would certainly simplify equation ( 6.3 ) to yield : but it is clear intuitively that we can not completely fill the file , as the last available storage position would on average be half the file area away from the last record 's computed address .
27 Can I put it to you that we can not today accept the recommendation on page forty-eight .
28 A problem in social research is that we can not easily isolate factors .
29 For it is implied that we can not meaningfully claim that a given object might be different in certain respects without becoming a different individual .
30 What is clear , though , is that we can not really go back to ‘ 1970s feminism ’ , and that inasmuch as we do work with the social and political categories which are the valuable heritage of that period we now do so with a proper awareness of their construction and provisionality .
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