Example sentences of "can not be take as " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It seems clearly to describe something about our culture , yet can not be taken as an absolute . |
2 | But in any case , her prominence in the preparations for the 5 October march , and her leading part in it , did not mean that she intended that it should lead to a violent outcome , and the mere fact of her CPNI membership can not be taken as evidence for the existence of a violent conspiracy . |
3 | However , the continuation of a tradition of appointed local boards can not be taken as a vote of confidence in their predecessors . |
4 | It , of course , can not be taken as scientific fact . |
5 | Bacon 's case , occurring as it did after eighteen years of Stuart rule , can not be taken as evidence for judicial corruption under the Tudors . |
6 | For the moment , however , it is sufficient to note that the formation of interest groups is a problem of the highest order ; the group world can not be taken as a given but needs to be explained ; and we have to attend to the determinants of individual consciousness and awareness , and the part they play in the development of groups and political conflict . |
7 | In effect , they argue that the governmental agenda can not be taken as a given . |
8 | First , if the action must be taken very urgently , it can not be taken as part of a full corporate strategic analysis ; there would not be the time . |
9 | Yet , in my opinion , the only two continuous accounts of the events — the First and Second Books of Maccabees — can not be taken as contemporary witnesses to the facts . |
10 | But Ward re-asserted BAF 's belief that ‘ ignorance on the part of an athlete can not be taken as a plea of not guilty . |
11 | As has already been noted , the number of foreign-language publications read can not be taken as a direct measure of the success or otherwise of the Library 's foreign purchasing programme ; however , in 1973 the then level of demand for such items was described as ‘ disappointingly low ’ , and the hope that the external circulation of lists of foreign accessions would have increased it was recognised to have been vain . |