Example sentences of "that can [adv] [adv] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The point , therefore , is to validate Marxism , to show that it is not simply a method of interpretation , nor even that it is the best method of interpretation that can most successfully account for the facts and the course of history , but to prove a priori that history works according to dialectical structures , and to demonstrate ‘ the moments of their inter-relations , the ever vaster and more complex movement which totalises them and , finally , the very direction of the totalization , that is to say , the ‘ meaning of History ’ and its Truth , ( I , 69 ) .
2 And they also lead to synapses that can no longer function without the drug .
3 The negative consequence , however , is that Christians there have developed a ghetto mentality that can no longer think in terms of mission , but only survival .
4 A huge spaceship supports forests that can no longer survive on earth .
5 If an arrangement is chosen that can not physically pass through its end positions without breaking the couple , then the iterative procedure will state , after a set number of attempts , that it is unable to re-establish the associations in this configuration .
6 He has decided that the reason Iago proffers for his villainy ( especially the absurd idea that both Casio and Othello have slept with his wife ) are genuine , if deranged convictions , rather than the dispassionately improvised rationalisations of a mind that can not even account to itself for its limitless evil .
7 Almost alone in Europe , the Early music critics have scorned the triviality and self-indulgence that can so easily spring from this subjectivism ; perhaps without realizing it , they have correspondingly sought to direct the music they love towards the musical tradition of cathedrals and chapels .
8 Recorded not long after a live cycle at the 1974 Aix-en-Provence Festival celebrating the 50th anniversary of the composer 's death , these are wide-ranging , run-in performances that completely escape the contrivance and routine that can so often creep into such extensive complete surveys .
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