Example sentences of "not [verb] [that] [pers pn] is " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Whether one accepts that view or not — and I do not think that it is valid in its simple form ( see Fine and Harris ( 1985 ) ) — it is a powerful one ; in that context , the fact that the proportion of foreign assets in UK pension funds ' total investments has risen is a mark of the power that the post-1979 boom in the City 's foreign investment has had .
2 I do not think that it is fanciful to suggest that public confidence in the administration of justice is undermined by such assertions from a powerful interest group .
3 I do not think that it is necessary to refer to all of those provisions because they really do not take the matter any further .
4 If one decides to give away £5m to encourage the arts , I do not think that it is a very sensible way to give it to my noble friend Lord Archer , who is a very rich man already , and who gets £6,000 a year out of the pockets of taxpayers who are very much poorer than he is . ’
5 The hon. Lady persists — I do not think that it is because she does not understand — in making the bogus comparison between in-patient and out-patient waits now and in 1979 .
6 Given my hon. Friend 's well-known commitment to productivity , efficiency and careful spending of money in the public sector , I am surprised by her suggestion and I do not think that it is tremendously sensible .
7 I do not think that it is right for the hon. Lady to knock the national health service in that way .
8 I do not think that it is a matter for discussion at the special Security Council meeting next week ; it is certainly a matter which remains on our agenda .
9 I do not think that it is wisdom that is required but if I can do anything , I will .
10 I do not think that it is necessary to provide any more parliamentary time for that .
11 The right hon. Member for Birmingham , Sparkbrook ( Mr. Hattersley ) says that it will be at £36,000 , but the right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Monklands , East ( Mr. Smith ) will not tell us and says that he does not think that it is necessary to say so .
12 I do not think that it is possible to change that definition .
13 That is an interesting literary distinction , but I do not think that it is much more than that .
14 of my households are single-person households — I do not think that it is quite that high — I shall make absolutely certain that every one knows the Labour party 's policy for them .
15 I do not think that it is in any way insulting to say that the epithet , ’ Clyde-built ’ , which was a badge of quality in the last century , was getting somewhat tarnished during the post-war years .
16 I do not think that it is necessary for me to send for the chairmen of Back-Bench committees .
17 It would seem to cover the situation where the accused takes the victim 's umbrella dishonestly and the victim buys back the umbrella , not realising that it is his own .
18 He is not suggesting that it is ‘ thought ’ that is the main determining force .
19 I am not suggesting that it is proven that our motives , reasons and purposes are not themselves reducible to mechanically operating causal factors , as a fully determinist model would have it ; but if that is the case , we are so far from being able to specify these factors that they do not offer a model we can actually work with — as we saw in the discussion of positivist criminology in Chapter 2 .
20 The Monopolies and Mergers Commission did not allow the 1986 bid to proceed and rejected GEC 's claims arguing that : ‘ We do not consider that it is possible in the field of electronics to establish a direct link between company size and competitive performance ’ .
21 These trends might of course represent the beginning of a change in progress , but if this is so , it is not yet established as a pattern that we can show by our methods as regular , and so we can not demonstrate that it is a change .
22 At present , Josephson is unable to offer an explanation of psychic energy and its effects but he does not doubt that it is ‘ positive , a genuine phenomenon ’ .
23 So man 's greatness comes from knowing that he is wretched , for a tree does not know that it is wretched .
24 You will not know that he is really er here in a commercial way .
25 ( b ) Provided the the kind of damage is reasonably foreseeable , it does not matter that it is more extensive than could have been foreseen .
26 However , I regret that it does not appear that she is to address the Council of Europe , of which the hon. Gentleman and I are Assembly members .
27 Should this not be taken into account , and does it not appear that it is not taken into account in the voluntary code ?
28 According to Berkeley , this does not show that he is wrong .
29 So simply making up the calcium that astronauts excrete may not ensure that it is laid down properly in new bone .
30 These cortical consequences of social evolution provide the basis for the acquisition of some sort of superego , even if they can not ensure that it is a rational , mature and adaptive one .
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