Example sentences of "he does not deny " in BNC.
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1 | He does not deny the existence of mind , and he does not deny that it is the province of mind to think and perceive . |
2 | He does not deny the existence of mind , and he does not deny that it is the province of mind to think and perceive . |
3 | But , just as Hobbes does not deny we have a mind or soul , so he does not deny the existence of God . |
4 | He does not deny internally generated change , which might occur from natural factors , such as drought or population growth , but suggests that the latter forces are more important in pre-industrial conditions . |
5 | He does not deny : ‘ That 's the fastest time ever run , but it 's not as fast as the world record . ’ |
6 | Obviously he does not deny the cat 's whining and agitated leaping in the presence of the ball , nor does he refuse its possession of ‘ sensory data ‘ , but these will not show what the cat believes ; namely , ‘ what categories of things it recognises ’ . |
7 | He does not deny that some scientists and engineers in British industry are doing world-class research — the signal and image processing work at British Telecom 's labs is an example , says Sir Eric — but he would argue that there are no world-class labs as such in the UK , nowhere that has attained the kind of critical mass in R&D that Bell Labs has in the US or Hitachi and NEC in Japan . |
8 | Ursula is angered by his characteristic preference for the past , and , though he does not deny the preference , he does reject the chair , along with the ‘ hateful ’ thought of a home : ‘ a horrible tyranny of a fixed milieu , where each piece of furniture is a commandment stone ’ . |
9 | He does not deny that there are groups of workers who are intermediate between these two classes , but he argues that they do not constitute a fully developed class . |
10 | While he does not deny that they often speak in a manner that ‘ normal ’ people regard as metaphoric , he points out that poets are aware of the metaphoric nature of their linguistic productions , whereas schizophrenics are not ; they use what Rogers calls ‘ unlabelled metaphor ’ ( 1978:42 ) . |