Example sentences of "not [adv] [verb] [prep] account " in BNC.

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1 This is a poll which does not necessarily take into account diligence , ability to pass on knowledge and devotion , as the one with the highest number of votes wins .
2 Specifically , this means not only taking into account man 's obvious close evolutionary ties with the chimpanzee and gorilla , but also his rather less obvious resemblance to another primate , the gelada baboon .
3 In my view the trial judge , dealing as he was with a most difficult and distressing case under the necessity to give a decision immediately , did not sufficiently take into account the degree of pressure required to constitute undue influence in the case of a patient in the position of Miss T. I agree with Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. that there is abundant evidence which would justify this court in coming to the conclusion that she was subjected to the undue influence of her mother which vitiated her decision .
4 By section 1(3) , a design shall not be registered if the appearance of the article is not material ; that is , if aesthetic considerations are not normally taken into account to a material extent by persons acquiring or using articles made to the design .
5 Rights to participate on a winding up are not usually taken into account , as financial statements are generally prepared on a going concern basis and , accordingly , such rights are not usually relevant to accounting .
6 Admittedly , these are all important areas of concern , but moral reasoning should not be made subservient to what are themselves value laden economic arguments which do not always take into account the totality of the costs they purport to assess .
7 Nevertheless , distinguished musicians might be pleased to tackle the challenge of simplicity required by a church with few musical resources , and congregations are not often taken into account in commissioned music .
8 However , such psychological analyses , concentrating upon the individual 's feelings , do not typically take into account the wider , ideological context .
9 Comparisons between the incomes of age-groups , as in Figure 5.1 , give only very rough indications of differences in disposable financial resources , for they do not fully take into account differences in household composition .
10 This projection , based on modest assumptions of growth in demand , does not fully take into account reductions in working hours or demands resulting from technological advances .
11 In this case , the Law Lords chose to say that the GLC had not adequately taken into account the interests of the rate payers and that the interests of the users of public transport had been unduly preferred .
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