Example sentences of "[noun sg] can [be] deduced from " in BNC.

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1 Some of these restrictions stem from the steady.state performance ( e. g. the maximum stepping rate with a given load torque can be deduced from the pull-out torque/speed characteristics ) , but still more restrictions arise when transient performance is considered .
2 However the general form of the law can be deduced from 2.1 and the fact that ALT is fully symmetrical ( see below ) .
3 The static position error can be deduced from the torque/position characteristic by drawing the line corresponding to a torque of 0.1 Nm .
4 For a single inductor or capacitor of negligible loss , the latter being more common , the inductance or capacitance can be deduced from the measured impedance provided that the frequency of the current is known .
5 Some of the flavour and intent of each conference can be deduced from the ‘ keynote speakers ’ who , respectively , are the North American Indian installation and performance artist James A. Luna ; the promoters of the ‘ new art History ’ T.J.Clark and Griselda Pollock ; and the President of the Federal Republic of Germany , Richard von Weizsäcker .
6 The occupational structure of the town can be deduced from the freemen 's registers , for between 1559 and 1603 an average of about twenty men per annum , almost 900 in all , were admitted to the freedom of the city .
7 The exact role of cortisol is unknown , but its importance can be deduced from the observation that animals that can not produce cortisol , due to injury for instance , are very vulnerable in emergencies .
8 More specifically , the prospecls for revolution can be deduced from the mode of production within a particular social formation ( society ) and the class forces that are struggling for power .
9 This brought him into conflict with a pagan critic , and the exchange of argument can be deduced from the defence ( Apologia ) for Christianity which Justin composed and which he later supplemented with a further appendix .
10 Under these conditions the pull-out torque of the motor can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristics for the particular excitation scheme .
11 The required variation of current levels with rotor position can be deduced from the phase torque/position/current characteristics ; for example Eqn .
12 At low operating speeds the optimum detected position can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristic for the excitation scheme being employed .
13 The pores in the skin are a classic example : they ‘ can not become perceptible to us by themselves , but yet their presence in the skin can be deduced from sweat ’ .
14 There is also a problem in principle with the inferences that can be made from such evidence , especially the assumption that the nature of a regime can be deduced from the unconscious motives or conscious intentions of the people who run it .
15 The deployment of a weapon system involves a threat that that system will be used in certain circumstances which to some extent can be deduced from the characteristics of the weapon system itself .
16 The basic pull-out torque/speed characteristic in this region can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristic and the relationship between the two characteristics is discussed in the next section .
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