Example sentences of "can [not/n't] [vb infin] full " in BNC.

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1 Although the operational environment of CD-I ensures that , unlike CDROM , it is ideally suited to processing high quality sound and pictures together with computer graphics , text and numerics , it can not deliver full screen , full motion video .
2 It can not deliver full frame , full motion video although this may be available in later models .
3 And he concludes that although hymns and songs of praise are a ‘ poore sort ’ , they reflect the true worship of heaven , which itself can not do full justice to God 's greatness :
4 Such a brief survey can not do full justice to the theoretical ramifications of ‘ market economics ’ , but it should be sufficient to indicate how the new doctrine has been directed against the very basis of demand management as practised between 1950 and the early 1970s [ Walters , 1978 ] .
5 To ensure an employee becomes effective in his work as soon as possible , briefing on the areas mentioned above is most important but no matter how much business information is provided in advance , the expatriate can not give full attention to his work if he or members of his family suffer culture shock as a result of living in a strange environment .
6 Second , the teacher is constantly interrupted by other children and can not give full attention to the reader .
7 Although he was not the very first , he has come to be regarded as the pioneer , bush-whacking anthropologist , the originator of the doctrine that until you have lived cheek by jowl with an exotic tribe and spoken their language fluently you can not claim full professional status .
8 An attempt is being made to provide them with some form of base organisation without which they can not develop full effectiveness .
9 CD-Rom is an ideal system for data storage , but unlike IV , the discs can not display full motion video .
10 So either grammars ( models of competence ) must make reference to pragmatic information , or they can not include full lexical descriptions of a language .
11 The allocation procedures , especially for Local Government , are very complex and we can not provide full details here ( a more detailed account of the current system is given by Hobcraft , forthcoming ; for a broader , historical sweep see Bennett , 1982 ; see also Department of the Environment , 1985 , and Association of County Councils , 1985 ) .
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