Example sentences of "who [vb base] [not/n't] [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 One small corpse found recently in a fashionable district bore the warning : ‘ I kill all those who do n't go to school . ’
2 There are children who do n't go to school — the national figures are that roughly 150,000 children do not attend school in the primary school age group .
3 There are still 12,000 people in our small area who do n't go to any of the four or five churches .
4 Particularly among those who do n't go to church — ’ he eyed Peter — ‘ but might ? ’
5 The North West has become a mecca for motorcycling enthusiasts as well as a special week-end for thousands of people who do n't go to any other event during the year .
6 But there is one big difference — excluding supervisors , it is manned by people who do n't want to be there .
7 There are those of us who do n't want to be tough , who think that tough leads to murder .
8 Staff there , who do n't want to be named were horrified that children should be the target of a terrorist attack .
9 Well , even if that 's true , though , Terry , I mean what we 're interested in is those who are sleeping out there who do n't choose to .
10 In Latin America and Africa , as well as this country , there are bodies of faithful Catholics who do n't adhere to church doctrine . ’
11 But then , those with the highest expectations of their priest 's wife are those who do n't come to church . ’
12 Mr Kinnock hoped a Labour government would be so successful ‘ as to diminish the support for several parties who do n't happen to be our political allies and are unlikely to become so . ’
13 are benefitting people who do n't have to , never had to scrat around
14 HI FI enthusiasts who do not want to be involved in new-fangled digital technology now have a fresh analogue controversy to get their teeth into .
15 But even this can be dangerous because we are all growing , changing humans who do not want to be ‘ taken for granted ’ .
16 Well I 've visited both Cambodia itself and the camps , er first of all in the camps , the situation is appalling because there are very many people who do not want to be in those camps and are really in effect being held there against their will , and what has been extraordinary until this year , is that the people who 've been holding them there against their will have been the Phol Pot dominated so-called coalition government and on the basis of the people being in the camps , that , that , that regime has gone on to claim recognition at the United Nations ; an appalling situation .
17 Conversely , sixty-three per cent of those who do not go to church report that none of their friends or acquaintances has ever invited them ’ ( McGavran and Hunter 1980:33 , 34 ) .
18 provide a general education for those who do not go to grammar schools , usually up to the minimum school leaving age ( though pupils can stay on longer ) .
19 I want us to think for a moment about the rights and needs of all those millions of children who do not go to school , who are invisible because very often development programmes tend to ignore er their needs .
20 The latter includes , for example , trade unionists who go on strike or local authorities ( such as the abolished Greater London Council ) who do not aspire to this kind of populism .
21 Conservatives thus hold what must appear , to those who do not hold to a conservative position , to be a distorted conception of what he was about .
22 The Irish Republic is a Catholic country and even those Protestants who do not expect to be actively persecuted doubt that they will have full civil and religious liberty when the major religious institution refuses to engage in fair competition by , for example , permitting the parents free choice of their child 's religion in the case of mixed marriage .
23 It is Davie 's contention that this view is quite wrong : there are a great many outstandingly talented British poets , including Charles Tomlinson , C H Sisson , Elaine Feinstein and others ( Davie , as distinguished a poet as any of his subjects , modestly excludes his own work ) who do not answer to this description , and one purpose of Under Briggflats is to claim for them the attention they have often been denied ; in some cases , indeed , to rescue them from scandalous neglect .
24 In addition to the single people who choose to be alone , there are many hundreds of thousands of widows , widowers and unmarried people who do not choose to be alone , but are .
25 In rich societies , on the other hand , most people do have enough discretionary income left ( or have easy access to credit ) after they have paid for their food and shelter , though the numbers who do not appear to be growing at an alarming rate in some rich countries ( as the growth of homelessness in the United States and the United Kingdom seems to suggest ) .
26 There are those who feel , for instance , that a revolution did take place but not one which achieved positive effects ; or others who dispute the existence of an English revolution but who do not adhere to a neo-conservative interpretation of English history .
27 In such communities the focused norms may be codified in dictionaries and grammars , and there may be penalties ( such as educational failure ) for individuals who do not adhere to the norm .
28 What we are witnessing , I fear , is the birth of a new and dangerously illiberal ‘ liberal ’ orthodoxy designed to accommodate Dr Akhtar and his fundamentalist friends , who do not pretend to be part of the Western liberal tradition .
29 The pattern has usually been for such people to establish themselves as privileged representatives of a ‘ god ’ who has the power to punish or destroy those who do not conform to the rules which they , the privileged , have themselves formulated , but have attributed to the ‘ god ’ .
30 Those women who do not conform to constructed aesthetic ideals are punished and excluded .
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