Example sentences of "these [noun] can [be] [vb pp] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The aesthetic quality of the results will depend heavily on the artistic ability of the user but even these skills can be developed in time
2 These skills can be applied to a fairly wide range of tasks which can be tackled by the lowest achievers .
3 These openings can be found by ramblers who prefer daylight to darkness and , like me , like to wander in search of them , but the black labyrinth to which they lead , the complex network below ground , is reserved exclusively for those experienced in subterranean travel , hardy adventurers who risk rockfalls and flooding to satisfy an insatiable curiosity to go where few men have been before , to see what few men have seen before .
4 ‘ In our judgment , bearing in mind Viscount Dilhorne 's warning in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Humphrys [ 1977 ] A.C. 1 , 26 , that this power to stop a prosecution should only be used ‘ in most exceptional circumstances , ’ … the effect of these cases can be summarised in this way .
5 Thanks to this way of analysing the movement of to , the expressive effects of unexpectedness , good or bad luck and the like produced by the to infinitive in these cases can be accounted for .
6 before these , before these cases can be brought to the court .
7 These patterns can be related to the same type of factors as described above for the urban-rural shift .
8 These meetings can be segregated into two broad types :
9 ‘ By ensuring that these inventions can be patented in all Community countries , this measure aims to encourage research in the context of the large market and to help European industry compete on equal terms with its American and Japanese rivals , who already enjoy such a facility ’ , the Commission declared .
10 Studies of these entities can be conducted by Ph D students in any country , and the theses describing the results of such research will be written in the language of the researcher , and deposited within the particular system of bibliographic control which has evolved in that country .
11 International differences in these attitudes can be correlated with differences in the birth-rate .
12 These interactions can be classified into two groups :
13 Two of these states can be identified with sleep states which show a continuity of development to maturity in the form of REM sleep and deep slow wave sleep .
14 If compatible lines of IT development are pursued , these investments can be spread over several projects .
15 These mutations can be transmitted from one generation to the next in breeding studies .
16 Broadly speaking , these discourses can be divided into reading , criticism and poetics , and in the structuralist view these divisions are radical .
17 All these activities can be included in a private course if requested .
18 Although these institutions can be regarded as providers of ‘ external ’ courses , considerable co-operation on production of courses is possible , and desirable from the library 's point of view .
19 Copies of these forms can be found in Appendix C , forms 13 to 16 .
20 Some of these conflicts can be identified with particular ideologies .
21 The second of these reasons can be overcome by careful drafting .
22 These acts can be traced to a plethora of practices which encourage sexually aggressive behaviour in men and boys , in a context in which there are few effective sanctions .
23 Most of these acts can be attributed to the emotion of compassion , referred to earlier in this book as probably being one of the earliest of human emotions to emerge from the dawning of civilisation .
24 These profiles can be approximated by diode.shaping circuits ( Maginot and Oliver , 1974 ) which " round-off " the linear ramp up/down signal before it is input to the voltage.controlled oscillator .
25 Anyone who has worthwhile pure-breeds needs to promote and sell stock ( those iniquitous Salmonella regulations notwithstanding ) , so that these birds can be distributed around the country to save them in case of some devastating disease appearing ( my free-range flock was nearly destroyed by Gumboro two years ago ) .
26 Obvious discussion points are based on the introduction of the mathematical names for the more common shapes and of some of their properties , but only in the simplest terms , e.g. which shapes will roll , which will slide , etc. and these discussions can be centred at one time upon the three-dimensional solid and on another occasion on the two-dimensional bounding surfaces .
27 The acquisition of these products can be accomplished with existing resources at the Science Museum .
28 The probabilities for these rules can be obtained from corpora .
29 The overall aim is to establish a practical knowledge of management methods for use with young children who present behaviour or management problems , and to provide training in how these methods can be transmitted to the primary managers — parents .
30 It is often the case that one of these methods can be combined with documentary or historical information , or two or more of the methods or approaches can be combined .
  Next page