Example sentences of "[vb -s] never " in BNC.

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1 Will WONDERS never cease ?
2 Tom has infected at least 6 people — thought he has never even met Jane , Mark and Alan .
3 In the schools the needs for AIDS education has never been greater .
4 The need for a national and international AIDS charity has never been greater .
5 Effective prevention has never been more urgently needed , especially in schools .
6 Torture of political detainees in Mauritania has been routine since 1986 , but it has never before been used on such a scale .
7 Adherence to this stated principle has never faltered , but other areas of concern took precedence and it was not until the late 1970s that this area of work was developed .
8 For this reason , they feel that the siege of Londonderry has never been lifted and they are prepared to die to defend that heritage .
9 It is important to note that , since the system began in the late 1920s , there has never been a significant move to split up the schools for use by the separate denominations , something which would have been feasible in the larger towns .
10 When Arthur Guinness started to brew porter in his Dublin brewery he created an insatiable demand for his beer that has never waned in Ireland .
11 He 's Woodleigh 's cousin , and his heir , of course , unless that 's the older Horbury brother who ran off to Australia years ago and has never been heard of since .
12 The work of this major artist has never been seen in any depth in Europe .
13 Not ideal for a woman who has never been pregnant .
14 It may also be the reason why , in its forty-year history , the Police Staff College has never achieved any real academic status ; for , as Lewis ( ibid. 183 ) also points out :
15 My own ‘ anthropological history ’ in this liminoid phase became extended over eight years , until 1974 , and not only gave me time to reflect on many of the controls we were required to impose , but also to consider the nature of the social harm these unworldly folk devils and ‘ drug fiends ’ were actually causing ; for established society has never really known how to handle the unworldly easily .
16 For the past forty or so years since the railways passed into public ownership , the issue of social support — that is the extent to which unremunerative routes should be directly subsidised by the taxpayer — has never been entirely clear .
17 But for many , the idea of selling those treasured pieces at a major sale has never crossed their mind ; either that , or they just do n't know how to do so .
18 This will be a show the like of which has never been seen .
19 Mais r-r-rien de plus ! ’ ; and on the other , and also out of his own mouth , ‘ sponging has never been the guiding principle of my actions .
20 Standardisation has never been the IT industry 's strong point , and the answer is ‘ probably not ’ .
21 However , he has never stated that this was in fact the case .
22 Indeed , it is often assumed by Continental and North American commentators that there has never been any significant literary theory in England .
23 Lodge himself , in his own admirable novels , has never been hampered by any lack of conviction that the language he employs is really about the social realities that he wittily records .
24 ‘ Research ’ in English has never been easy to define .
25 But the word ‘ politics ’ itself needs to be deconstructed , since politics is to do with our ideals of what human life should be , about which there has never been agreement ; indeed , it is out of the disagreement that politics arises .
26 It has never been de rigueur for academics who rise to high places in English departments , and , conversely , students who possess it may not do well in formal examinations .
27 Prothero the demon-king has never bounded on to the stage more sulphurously than in Hugh Kenner 's The Pound Era :
28 Ezra can be mistaken — more thoroughly mistaken than most people — but he has never been venal .
29 He is one of the few people I have ever met who has never been either inflated or deflated by personal possessions .
30 Is it perhaps true that for many of the English , poetry has never been anything else but a superior parlour game ?
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