Example sentences of "must [not/n't] be allowed " in BNC.
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1 | This is not to say that functionalists would be in sympathy with Freud 's belief that certain unconscious mental processes are so anxiety-provoking that they must not be allowed to enter awareness . |
2 | Damp must not be allowed to enter as rot can quickly result . |
3 | What the GLC were hoping to do with London 's transport system now looks quite farsighted , and the learned judge 's remark that Ken Livingstone ‘ had made a naked grasp for power that must not be allowed ’ just silly . |
4 | Concern about sea-level rise must not be allowed to divert attention from other problems caused by the increase of coastal populations . |
5 | Lloyd 's has put forward a constructive plan ; it must not be allowed to flounder on rate . |
6 | Clearly the various substances synthesized inside the cell must not be allowed to escape . |
7 | SIR Ian McKellen ( Letters , March 29 ) must not be allowed to get away with his blanket assertion that equality for homosexuals has been established throughout Europe . |
8 | The dog must not be allowed to win . |
9 | Personally , I do not share that view but whatever the reason , stubbornness must not be allowed to succeed : the dog must do what he is commanded to do , not in his own time , when he feels like it , but immediately ; and if it is done correctly , he should receive praise and lots of it . |
10 | They must not be allowed to train a new and superior élite , and free places in them ( when and where they are introduced ) should go not only to the cleverest but to those who need a boarding education . |
11 | Alcoholic drinks should only be given if the doctor allows it , and the patient must not be allowed to drink excessive amounts of alcohol . |
12 | He must not be allowed to think that staying in bed would solve the physical problems of his hemiplegia , as the opposite would certainly happen : he would become lazy , weak , and his spasticity would become more entrenched and pronounced . |
13 | The advice concludes , however , with the observation that ‘ this situation should be looked at sensibly and the prohibition outlined above must not be allowed to jeopardise the patient 's health . |
14 | But they must not be allowed to become bored with the whole thing . |
15 | They must not be allowed to lose sight of the prime message . |
16 | The issues are complex and multi-faceted , but a concentration on economic questions — as in the application of the QALY approach — must not be allowed to overshadow humanitarian considerations . |
17 | An orientation towards the pressures in the CAB today makes the reiteration of the opening words important : that problems must not be allowed to overshadow the fact that 15,000 people in the UK are experiencing satisfaction , involvement and a sense of achievement within their communities through their work in a Citizens Advice Bureau . |
18 | At all costs aggressive behaviour must not be allowed to be rewarding . |
19 | The student must not be allowed to leave the ward with the feeling expressed by Sir John Davies in Nosce Teipsum : |
20 | The second lesson is that the property market can not and must not be allowed to dictate the form , pace and content of urban change . |
21 | This government must not be allowed to dismantle our NHS while the academics and social scientists look on . |
22 | Where such worries exist the inconsequential chatter must not be allowed to continue too long . |
23 | In all cases insulation material must not be allowed to block the ventilation openings . |
24 | The child has no awareness of danger and must not be allowed to make the decision about levels of independence . |
25 | It must not be allowed to happen to anyone else . |
26 | Similarly , when you have visitors , your dog must not be allowed to jump up on them . |
27 | Must not be allowed to matter . |
28 | Because it is pathological it must not be allowed to appear in public in its own form . |
29 | Above all , functionalism must not be allowed to become a kind of contagious magic characterized , in Frazer 's definition , by the confusion of effects with causes . |
30 | The second accepts as normative American practice , with which foreign judicial authorities must not be allowed to interfere . |