Example sentences of "[noun] does [not/n't] go [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 First of all I think at the end of the day that we all know a democracy never comes cheap , it 's erm , there are cheaper alternatives for administering decisions , but erm , but dictatorship does n't go well and therefore democracy will never come cheap .
2 Yeah and a shire horse does n't go very fast .
3 A lot of creative people 's time will have been wasted if the programme does n't go out .
4 Startling evidence that the National Health Service cancer screening programme does n't go far enough was revealed last November , with the release of shock figures from Action Cancer in Belfast .
5 The Old Testament does not go in for saints .
6 The Bond organisation , however , succeeded in securing a ‘ deposit ’ of A$1.2billion from Bell Resources for the brewery business , which Mr Spalvins has insisted must be repaid if the Lion Nathan deal does not go through .
7 One publication to her name , and a slim book called Helpmeets without irony does n't go down well with today 's feminists .
8 But how do you cope if the fear does n't go away ?
9 Besides , the KGB does n't go in for assassinations these days . ’
10 And now , now I 'm wearing the scarf the er the cold does n't go down .
11 So the divorce of sex from reproduction which is erm a very common and even fashionable view in the later twentieth century and of course is one very much facilitated by modern birth control technology and things like that this , this divorce of sex and reproduction is in a way you could say a characteristically male way of looking at things if the male 's er contribution to offspring does n't go much further than the initial fertilization .
12 But one tyre specialist says the law does n't go far enough and he thinks the limit should be increased even further .
13 In Britain at least , and to a greater or lesser extent in other financial centres also , this deregulatory trend has been accompanied by a wave of new regulatory developments to ensure that deregulation does not go too far .
14 What kind of cat does n't go outside ?
15 But the US Environmental Protection Agency has decided that the voluntary withdrawal does not go far enough .
16 £50000 does not go very far in TV , except on one or two small regional stations ; it is quite difficult , as the cigarette companies find , to spend £1 million plus on a brand without using TV at all : if you only have a few hundred pounds to spend there are few press media in which you can consider full pages or even moderately large sizes .
17 I have been feeling so groggy lately I just want to ensure the plan does n't go awry if anything happens to me … "
18 Aimed at electronic publishing , software engineering and document imaging applications , it is pitched as a cheaper alternative to Sun Microsystems Inc 's Sparcstation IPX — Hewlett says that at $18,480 , an HP 9000 Model 705 with two of the new stations gives a three-user configuration that is 20% more powerful at 37% less cost than three IPXs — Sun does n't go much on X-stations .
19 Even a bit of flattery does n't go amiss . ’
20 The see saw does n't go round and round
21 ‘ The Atlantic does n't go as far as Tennessee , ’ she said .
22 Christine Brooke-Rose does not go so far as to disavow authorial creativity altogether , but she too sees technology as the possible key to a breakthrough in how we think about the human subject .
23 Like the Dane , the criticism does not go away .
24 Er diary does n't go that far .
25 Unfortunately , this weighty tome does not go nearly far enough into this fascinating world of the interrelationships that ants have with the plants and other animals in their day-to-day business of running the world : Rather , we have a specialised symposium that concentrates on the largely negative aspects of viewing some of the world 's most fascinating species only as anthropogenic pests .
26 It is not an infringement to drop the ball anywhere in the playing area so long as the ball does not go forward .
27 I thought to myself , ‘ Jimmy Dickinson does n't go abroad and certainly not to the States , so if I make a good job of it at Walton Heath I might be caddying for Sandy full-time in the future . ’
28 This offer does not go up .
29 Whether one defines a conductance or introduces a friction term they are just two different ways of expressing the empirical fact that the electrons ' velocity does not go on increasing indefinitely in response to a driving electric field .
30 Although Johnson does not go so far as to claim that the affectless society was responsible for the Moors Murders , she does feel able to argue that the general atmosphere in society at the time had ‘ infected ’ the social system , and that ‘ Brady possibly , Hindley almost certainly , have been victims of fallout ’ .
  Next page