Example sentences of "[vb base] [not/n't] necessarily [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But statistics do not necessarily make for good intelligence .
2 Hand-made panels do not necessarily make for better cars .
3 We do not necessarily think of pigments in the context of metalwork , but there are traditions of painted metal statues .
4 Changes of emphasis within art education , which have arisen out of a realization that the skills of response and appreciation do not necessarily result from the practice of art , have led to explorations into the nature of aesthetic experience , enquiries into its patterns of development and attempts to assess the skills and achievements possible within this area ( APU , 1983 ) .
5 The terms ‘ old age ’ and ‘ retirement ’ are often used interchangeably , but they do not necessarily refer to the same things .
6 On several occasions when their views have been canvassed , the judges of the High Court and the Court of Appeal have shown themselves capable of contemplating changes that do not necessarily coincide with popular or professional opinion .
7 This immediately creates some problems , since " codes " for this purpose are social constructs , and do not necessarily coincide with what linguists would recognise as discrete languages .
8 Important as rules are , they do not necessarily bite with the same degree of force in every case .
9 It is also the case , of course , that stated aims do not necessarily match with practice .
10 But Galbraith admits there will be more : ‘ Our results could seriously misrepresent the total number because sufferers do not necessarily go to venereologists or dermatologists .
11 Evans-Pritchard and others have also pointed out that the divisions between scientific and non-scientific thinking as such , if they can indeed be reliably established , do not necessarily correlate with different social groups .
12 ‘ . These figures do not necessarily correlate with increased market power , however , there being evidence to indicate that aggregate concentration and concentration in individual industries have not increased since the mid-1970's .
13 ( 2 ) Straight or curved lines that radiate from a common centre , but do not necessarily pass through it .
14 Such relations do not necessarily hold within a phase if the average stresses and strains for that phase are substituted in the above . )
15 The hurtful effects of a piece of music do not necessarily stem from anything intrinsically harmful within itself , or even from its being used for manipulation .
16 One of the difficulties in making the diagnosis of ME — which is a post viral syndrome with a multiplicity of symptoms — is that sufferers do not necessarily present with the same symptoms ; however the film showed most graphically how the entire family is affected by such a misunderstood illness .
17 Although the courts do have wide powers to re-allocate property and can require an ex-husband to take out life assurance , such arrangements do not necessarily compensate for the loss of an index-linked widow 's pension in old age or a lump sum and widow 's pension payable on a husband 's death in service .
18 Contrary to popular belief , long timespans given over to arduous , repetitive practice do not necessarily equate with improvement .
19 Black pupils need to achieve academically in order to enter the labour market even at the lowest level in spite of evidence that qualifications do not necessarily lead to jobs ( see Brennan and McGeevor , 1987 , for example ) .
20 Those that carry the same names as overseas beers are produced under licence and do not necessarily adhere to the recipe or strength of the original .
21 Quinn sees large companies as similar to large rivers slowly moving in given directions , but containing within them various ebbs , flows and eddies which , while they do not necessarily contribute in any direct analytical way to the general direction , nevertheless in aggregate help to determine it .
22 However , please note that holidays do not necessarily return to the same port of departure .
23 It is often the case that the definition of administrative regions within countries tends to reflect certain historical and institutional processes which , although they might have produced some degree of spatial cohesion , do not necessarily accord with what one might view as appropriate for economic scrutiny .
24 More and more tents are coming onto the market which do not necessarily conform to these definitions but they will rely predominantly on one system for their stability .
25 Be they housing visitors , social workers , doctors , or , as in this case , teachers , all these personnel will have ideas which do not necessarily conform to the views prevailing within higher echelons of power .
26 They can be easily reconfigured between different product lines ( Cohen and Zysman , 1987 : ch. 9 ) and do not necessarily conform to the linear layout .
27 Similarly , the existence of technology-trading networks indicates that R&D and production do not necessarily need to be integrated under one roof to ensure that new products are efficiently produced ( although this is often a sensible course to follow ) .
28 They do need support , they do need often 24 hour attention , but they do not necessarily need to be in hospital .
29 Those warrants do not necessarily need to be served by the police .
30 The main points arising from this are that : ( 1 ) the vowel system is totally different from mainstream British English in terms of vowel-length , vowel-height , diphthongization and other properties ( for example , vowel-length is not usually contrastive , as it is alleged to be in RP , and so most vowel-phonemes , such as /e/ , as in gate , save , are realized as considerably longer or shorter allophones according to consonantal environment ) ; ( 2 ) allophones of phonemes can overlap phonetically with allophones of other phonemes in a manner that is not permitted by classical phoneme theory ( Bloomfield , 1933 ) ; ( 3 ) lexical items do not necessarily belong to the same vowel phoneme classes as they do in RP and SBE ( for example , whereas good and food have different vowels in most SBE , they have the same vowel in Ulster English ) ; and ( 4 ) many sets of lexical items exhibit vowel alternations , in that the vowels in these items are realizations of two different phonemes .
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