Example sentences of "she does not [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Or is it the case , as millions now believe , that she does not want a resolution to this dispute ? ’
2 But with the confidence of youth she does not want to wait beyond Barcelona for her first Games medal .
3 She does not want of be forced into a legal structure dominated by her .
4 And if a woman is tackling strenuous , dirty , physical tasks , she does not want to bother about presenting a pleasing picture ; clothes suitable for the job are a priority above a glamorous image .
5 This woman is unsentimental ; she does not want to cloud the light .
6 Thus attempting to coerce a person into doing something he or she does not want to do — i.e. infringing on the person 's autonomy — places that individual in increased peril of illness , injury , attack by wild animals or malevolent ‘ spirits ’ , or any of the other innumerable dangers that menace constantly .
7 She does not want to do housework .
8 She does not want you to be tried by the government . ’
9 He fears , as this moving tableau blots out his view , that she does not want to look at him but , then , just as he is allowing himself this painful thought , she turns and kisses him on the eyes before taking his cock in her mouth .
10 ‘ Maybe she does not want him to think that she is surrendering herself too easily , ’ he suggested .
11 Thirdly , irrespective of the source or Priority of the information , any Particular individual will psychologically " filter " out what he or she does not think important , or what he or she does not want to know .
12 Thus the other follows because she does not want to lose face with her white friend .
13 She does not want to know how little she weighs .
14 He has turned his head away , she is glad , she does not want his mocking face listening .
15 She does not want to be treated like a star . ’
16 Surely she does not want to deprive them of these amenities ?
17 She mentions Chodorow 's socialization theory of the transfer of concerns with care and responsibility from mothers to daughters , but she does not make it an integral part of her own account .
18 The parent warns the child that time out will be used if he or she does not do as he or she is told .
19 And that she does not do this is not accidental .
20 What she does not do is believe for one moment that Rainbow has been possessed by some kind of demon .
21 Although she uses the base form of the verb to indicate past tense as in JC , she does not do it consistently : she also uses several morphologically distinct past tense forms .
22 ‘ Also , if she thinks that all that matters is high marks , then she will feel her work is substandard if she does not achieve them . ’
23 She is a strong-minded woman who brooks no interference in her department : on the other hand , she does not involve herself in other people 's .
24 The difficulty is magnified when the sovereign is conceived as addressing ‘ the Commonwealth ’ comprising some countries which she rules on the advice of the respective ministers and other countries over which she does not reign at all .
25 During this time of testing , a sufferer from alcoholism mat say that he or she can not be alcoholic because he or she does not drink in the mornings or is still in regular employment or still has a home and family or perhaps only drinks wine and beer but never spirits or only drinks at the weekends .
26 Lakoff ( 1975 ) mentions cultural similarities in patterns of women 's and men 's language use , and proposes that feminists should learn from the black consciousness movement 's pride in Black English , but she does not extend this awareness into an analysis of differences within women 's and men 's languages .
27 But many hospitals have ‘ built-up ’ pockets of specialisms and she does not think that concentrating them on fewer sites would mean the loss of centres of excellence .
28 She ‘ would prefer to think of different languages as having the potential to exploit differing degrees of subjectivity ’ but she does not think there is ‘ any neutral ontology or world view which is objective and can serve as a universal yardstick .
29 So did the amusing little sag of her incipient double chin , the veining on her cheeks ( which , unlike Alix , she does not think to cover with Liquid Foundation ) , the slight plump soft dimpling of her upper arm , the raised veins in the backs of her hands , the broadening of her hips , the decreasing flexibility of her joints .
30 In her viva her examiner asks her if she does not think that ‘ dipthongisation in fourteenth century Kentish may have been optional ’ , and her immediate reaction is that ‘ The question made no sense at all ’ .
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