Example sentences of "can [adv] [adv] [vb infin] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They are the most powerful because they can most effectively expose the discipline for what it is .
2 It is shown that while the dodecamer under investigation does not contain any B II junctions , the central CpG step can most easily undergo the transition .
3 It is perfectly true that there is nothing conclusively in the poem to make us identify the first stair with Dante 's Inferno , the second with his Purgatorio , the third with Paradiso ; as there is not ( a more piercing uncertainty ) anything to determine for us whether ‘ the broadbacked figure drest in blue and green ’ , with his ‘ music of the flute ’ , is an image of what must be renounced in order to achieve Paradise , or else an image of how terrestrial life can most nearly attain the paradisal .
4 It was in this period , very roughly between 1050 and 1150 , that we can most readily discern the revival of many independent cities ; and it was in the 1150s that the first serious challenge to their independence was mounted by the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa .
5 M. You can jolly well read The Catcher In The Rye .
6 There can be no reliable estimate that — ’ 10 per cent of the homes built in 1980 in New Mexico were made from adobe ’ , because Spanish Americans and Anglo Americans far from rich , can so easily convert the soil from beneath their feet into walls around new rooms , and they do this regularly with their own hands in enlarging their houses .
7 Without professional help we can so easily aggravate the problem .
8 Much nearer to the intense spirit of the original staging is Christine Bunning 's Marenka , taking her tone from the opening duet with Jenik , which can so easily project the character as a social and emotional misfit .
9 The Parnham Trophy is open to both amateurs and professionals : as John Makepeace has said himself , ‘ the amateur can so often teach the professionals a thing or two ! ’
10 Strange , ’ Benjamin mused , ‘ this drunk who can so cleverly bolt the door after him , now finds it impossible to repeat the action to escape from an angry war horse . ’
11 From Oakeshott we can perhaps better appreciate the concepts of authority , liberty , and law which pervade normativist thought .
12 Because of the remarkable contours of the ground , a fielder in the deep can only just see the tops of the heads of his teammates .
13 Interactively organized circuits are highly resistant to analysis by the elimination of single components so we can only really use the lesion method if we can convince ourselves that the brain is organized differently .
14 " I shall also give a warning to those present , to the effect that , in my view , nothing could be worse for the treatment of cholera than the warm baths , mustard-plasters and compresses recommended by Dr Dunstaple , which can only further reduce the water content of the blood No medicine could be more dangerous in cholera collapse than opium , and calomel in the form of a pill is utterly useless . "
15 Using an element of known direction of curvature one can thus conveniently determine the direction of curvature of another element .
16 The inclusion of related subjects can thus often help the user with a specific search , particularly where he is not adequately familiar with the subject being sought or the way in which the subject is likely to be handled or packaged in the literature .
17 Steel cans , you can just about cover the costs of it .
18 Two teachers can just about find the room and comparative peace to talk together about the arrangements for the next lesson and next week .
19 ‘ Well , I can just about see the cemetery up there . ’
20 Of this lot I feel McCallen can just about win the race — or at least one of the Superbike classes — but Fogarty is obviously the man everyone has to beat and I feel he will not go away empty-handed .
21 Over the next ten acres , it seems to have made an immense fall , covering them with so vast a bed of stones , that no human art can ever again restore the soil . ’
22 I can still vividly remember the referee calling us together and saying : ‘ On your way . ’
23 The trees grow at such a rate here that you can hardly even see the sea . ’
24 The result is that the piece seems to become more polyphonic as the listener can more easily hear the lines .
25 not the student — can more easily discern the quality .
26 Far from being an enriching process in which students can more easily grasp the basics of science , they are left the poorer because their understanding is in fact limited , in the sense of being bounded , by the very standardisation that was meant to free them .
27 Case evidence can more thoroughly show the changes which have taken place in this sector and can investigate the effectiveness of flexibility as a strategy for industrial regeneration in this sector .
28 The use of role-play can similarly often give the impression that facades are more important than being oneself , acting a part more significant than reflective evaluation .
29 High initial charges , annual charges and early redemption or withdrawal penalties from insurance-type schemes can also massively affect the returns on your outlay .
30 This kind of repetition serves to consolidate the main message of the text ( which may otherwise not be sufficiently evident ) , and can also conveniently serve the ends ( through musical restatement ) of giving a strong , coherent musical form .
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