Example sentences of "can [not/n't] [be] accounted [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The differences between chimpanzees and us can not be accounted for by differences in these proteins .
2 Between 1952 and 1976 , more than two million urban jobs were lost that can not be accounted for in terms of national trends influencing unfavourable urban structures ( Danson , Lever and Malcolm , 1980 ) .
3 Other sorts of seemingly intelligent behavioural variability , though , can not be accounted for either by ‘ noise ’ in the computer or by habituation .
4 A strategy for handling toxic wastes is beginning to emerge , because of EEC directives , but a quarter of the wastes produced by the Republic can not be accounted for .
5 He says : ‘ Tinnitus ( Latin for ringing ) is the name given to the subjective ( heard only by the person concerned ) experience of hearing sounds in the ear or head which have no basis of reality in the environment , that is to say , the sound can not be accounted for by vibrations coming from objects external to the patient . ’
6 Goyigamas were substantially over-represented , a fact which can not be accounted for entirely by their agricultural pursuits .
7 But it is equally clear that its nature can not be accounted for by demonstrating its rules by a random use of any lexical items that come to mind .
8 Attention is drawn to the statement in TR794 that ‘ the tax consequences of pensions can not be accounted for in isolation from potential deferred tax effects from other sources ' , as , for example , ‘ deferred tax arising from sources other than pensions may enhance the prospective recoverability of tax arising in respect of pension payments ’ .
9 Since this high work of fracture — which makes trees able to stand up to the buffetings of life and which makes wood such a useful material — can not be accounted for by any of the recognized work of fracture mechanisms which operate in man-made composites , George set out to find out what was really happening .
10 This subject can not be accounted for completely within psychology , so psychology tries to exclude it ; but it keeps intruding in it ( Bem 1983 , Gilligan 1982 , 1986 ) .
11 He suggests that to attribute extra suffering to one particular factor — age , length of unemployment , marital status , etc. — is too crude , as is the emphasis on individual responsibility ; the gross disparities between the numbers of jobs and the numbers of those seeking jobs can not be accounted for in terms of the individual psychological characteristics of the latter , nor can the rapid changes in the former .
12 Although difficult to measure , these differences can not be accounted for simply by their accompanying economic differences .
13 We have seen how our feeling that a particular stretch of language in some way hangs together , or has unity , ( that it is , in other words , discourse ) , can not be accounted for in the same way as our feeling for the acceptability of a sentence .
14 Does it indicate that the meaning of an idiom can not be inferred from ( or , more precisely , can not be accounted for as a compositional function of ) the meanings the parts carry IN THAT EXPRESSION ?
15 The definition must be understood as stating that an idiom is an expression whose meaning can not be accounted for as a compositional function of the meanings its parts have when they are not parts of idioms .
16 Since the Unemployed Flow Survey reported no significant difference between men and women in this respect , the variation in the results obtained from the Cohort Study can not be accounted for by its concentration on men .
17 The above average rates of leukaemia in the study area can not be accounted for by these findings .
18 Moreover , they can not be accounted for merely by reference to spatial differences in social composition .
19 Despite Government counter-claims that this increase is due to 1986 changes in definitions of accidents from minor to major and fatal categories , all the increases can not be accounted for by the redefinition .
20 As Box reminds us , and as we discussed in Chapter Five , the arrest rate is higher for young blacks ( Stevens and Willis 1979 ) and these can not be accounted for entirely by differences in criminal activity .
21 Some constructs may reflect pre-verbal bases of organization which can not be accounted for by rational explanation .
22 The significant difference at 45 and 360 minutes postprandially between the results in the normal and these two morbidly obese subjects can not be accounted for by a difference in the urine output ( one way ANOVA , p>0.05 ) .
23 Changes in output which can not be accounted for by changes in the input of capital and labour are assumed to be accounted for by autonomous shocks in technology .
24 But there are other problems : for there re aspects of sentence-meaning which , at least on truth-conditional r other narrow semantic theories , can not be accounted for within semantic theory .
25 It causes the differences between individuals which can not be accounted for by intelligence or learning .
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