Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] one [vb mod] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 These facts do no more , however , than suggest that one ought not to rule out the possibility that Molla Fenari may have made the pilgrimage in company with Seyh Zeyneddin .
2 Some writers suggest that one can easily overestimate the significance and influence of the embryonic pre-independence African press .
3 Although I have stressed that one should not keep large amounts of money at home , it is of value to have at least a small amount of emergency money carefully hidden somewhere in the house , say , £20 .
4 It must be stressed that one should not rely on the proposition that the grounds of fault contained within third party correspondence are exhaustive .
5 Although Humphrey emphasises that one can not rule out the possibility of auto workers being a conservative force in the future , he does demonstrate that , at this particular historical-political conjuncture , their militant action provided a catalyst for change for the working class .
6 The British Trias is almost completely lacking in marine fossils below the Rhaetian , but I maintained that one could nevertheless see the effects of alpine transgressions reflected in our continental sediments .
7 It is important , however , that they realise that one can not treat labels .
8 This is an important change and I am glad that we have got away from the odious and patronising attitude of so many local education authorities — particularly Labour local education authorities — that say that one can not trust parents with objective information about how their children 's schools are doing .
9 Once we had got them down , we found that one could scarcely stand up .
10 Boas had objected that one could not define historical periods as one defines animal species .
11 In any case , it is permissable to observe that one can not regard the same problem as occuring here .
12 This is a good argument as it stands but one can well imagine that it would have been pressed in terms of these hopefuls having a right to be paid if they succeeded .
13 And if Turgenev were to object that one could not find a more typical product of the 1840s than the Petrashevsky Circle to which Dostoevsky belonged , how would the other man reply ?
14 Bukharin was suggesting that one can not construct a theory of transition a priori but must pragmatically steer towards a given objective , only then will the theory of transition emerge upon the basis of practical and concrete experience .
15 I am not suggesting that one should even form an interpretative overview , merely that details of notation , phrasing and articulation , tempo , dynamics and so on are considered alongside balance , texture , and even acoustical implications .
16 Field Marshal Lord Wavell was strong in his support for the S.A.S. He had commented that one should never allow oneself to be ‘ trammelled by the bonds of orthodoxy ’ .
17 I argued that one could never trust the Russian leaders .
18 Perhaps ‘ object ’ is a misleading term since it is increasingly plain that electronic corruption and software/hardware obsolescence mean that one will not be able to preserve the original electronic text or data .
19 Not that it is impossible , but practical considerations of gaining access to situations and the confidence of the people involved in any reasonable length of time mean that one will probably study the situation from one side or the other .
20 Gorbachev , at the two leaders ' concluding press conference , described the summit as an ‘ event of enormous importance for our bilateral relations ’ and added that one could now speak of a ‘ new phase of cooperation ’ between the two countries .
21 She brings home everything except potatoes and anyone who says that one ca n't get fresh vegetables in London must do her shopping by telephone , she is convinced .
22 However , if that application process takes a long time , it is felt that one can not upset that person 's lifestyle — he may be married — and he is allowed to stay .
23 However , once granted that one can not infer what to do from fact alone , there seems to be no flaw in the argument .
24 It is said that one can not go anywhere — I know that this was true in west Africa — without meeting someone from Upton who will give good and wise advice .
25 In an eminently Benjaminian vein , Kienholz has said that one can only understand a ‘ society by going through its junk stores and flea markets ’ .
26 We have argued that one can not counterpose the class and racism models of ethnic disadvantage .
27 He further intimated that one could never be certain what sort of action a feeble government might take in an attempt to solve its problems .
28 These are the basic considerations for getting ideas accepted and one should consciously work towards improving skill in this direction .
29 ( This , in passing , shows that one can not reduce the potential meaning of to the notions " future " , " potential " , " unrealized " or " hypothetical " . )
30 It shows that one need not lose hope .
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