Example sentences of "can be attributed [prep] [pron] " in BNC.
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1 | Through participation in the process of communication the child gradually becomes aware of the significance which can be attributed to her own actions and vocalisations . |
2 | However the high cost of closed-loop systems can be attributed to their small share of the market ; would closed-loop be any more expensive than open-loop if a comparable set of integrated circuit control packages was available ? |
3 | The impact of the polymerase chain reaction can be attributed to its practical simplicity and to its speed , sensitivity , and specificity . |
4 | Alliance 's revival can be attributed to its vigorous , straight-from-the-shoulder leadership , articulating a progressive pro-union approach which is so lacking elsewhere . |
5 | This can be attributed to its various physical properties . |
6 | Despite the invasive behaviour of the parasitic larval stages , little specific pathogenic effect can be attributed to them ; the exception is S. vulgaris , 90% of horses in Britain having lesions in the arterial system of the intestine caused by this species . |
7 | Whether such a ferret fatality can be attributed to it remaining unmated is highly debatable . |
8 | Not a small part of this success can be attributed to our growing team of new writers . |
9 | Much of his extraordinary combination of speed and stamina can be attributed to his physique . |
10 | The fact that the selection of a style became such a contentious issue can be attributed to his sustained advocacy of Gothic . |
11 | Much of it can be attributed to his astute realization that it was possible to break with the disastrous tradition of Pius IX without compromising on essentials . |
12 | Much of the emphasis on set theory in Lacan and others , as well as the similarity of certain of their ideas to those of Gödel , whose work Cavaillès utilizes , can be attributed to his influence : indeed it would be possible to argue that the whole emphasis in post-war French thinkers on a non-contradictory heterogeneity in which incompatible or incommensurable elements are juxtaposed against or as part of each other is derived as much from set theory as from Freud . |