Example sentences of "[pron] does not matter that " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I suppose it does not matter that this was a policy until lately dear to his heart , and even dearer to his wife 's .
2 ‘ We need some people to be made to testify under oath so we can find out what went wrong with that investigation , ’ said Mr Laframboise , stressing that , at this point , it does not matter that most of the physical evidence has been destroyed .
3 Perhaps in one sense it does not matter that he ignored the sometimes vandalistic assaults on the gospel texts by Form-critics and Redaction-critics ; just as it could be seen not to matter that the school of philosophy in which he was reared had been rendered more or less obsolete by the man who — in the year that Lewis was writing The Problem of Pain — had become a professor of philosophy at Cambridge : Ludwig Wittgenstein .
4 So it does not matter that the Exchange Rate Mechanism , which is crucial to the treaty , has virtually collapsed .
5 As though it does not matter that half of humanity have been prohibited from realizing their potential .
6 It does not matter that the plaintiffs ' cause of action against the third defendant arises from conspiracy or fraud whereas their cause of action against the third party arises from breach of a contractual or tortious duty of care .
7 It does not matter that the absurd meaning is the more natural and obvious meaning of the words .
8 It does not matter that a company has large capital assets if they are under employed and if the company is going broke .
9 In our surface dyslexia example , it does not matter that there are different kinds of surface dyslexics , so long as each of the patterns of surface dyslexia can be interpreted with reference to the same model of reading .
10 The method can work if there is a long time for the change-over , if both channels can be kept open and if it does not matter that the two systems are being used haphazardly .
11 It does not matter that the extent of the damage could not have been foreseen .
12 It does not matter that we already know to some extent what has happened to you .
13 It does not matter that A was at the time in possession in his capacity , not as seller , but as repairer .
14 It does not matter that the firm 's employees tried their best , the question is : does the program meet this objective standard ?
15 Moreover , once the elements of theft are satisfied , it does not matter that the victim has no civil law remedy .
16 In the former case it does not matter that the victim consented ; in the latter the conduct must be unauthorised .
17 It does not matter that the owner has a better right to possession than either of the thieves .
18 As long as there is fear , it does not matter that the gun was in fact unloaded , or as in Logdon [ 1976 ] Crim LR 121 , the weapon was an imitation firearm .
19 ( a ) If the kind of damage suffered is reasonably foreseeable , it does not matter that the damage came about in an unforeseeable way .
20 ( b ) Provided the the kind of damage is reasonably foreseeable , it does not matter that it is more extensive than could have been foreseen .
21 It does not matter that the redevelopment is likely to be carried out by a purchaser from the landlord rather than the landlord himself ( Adams v Green ) ; nor that the redevelopment proposals are very tentative ( Edwards ( JH ) & Sons Ltd v Central London Commercial Estates Ltd ( 1983 ) 271 EG 697 ) .
22 It does not matter that the plaintiff can not say when this is likely to happen .
23 It does not matter that you may perceive a witness to be a witness for the opposition ; although it will happen rarely , if they are prepared to see you , go and see them .
  Next page