Example sentences of "[adj] it could [verb] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ But , for someone who does n't know , in an old house like this it could take us months to find it . ’
2 I mean it could have been different it could have got out of control and then everybody would have turned and pointed a finger and that would have been awful .
3 It also became clear it could take two or three days of fierce ministerial talks to sort out the division of the £244.5 billion public spending cake .
4 Thousands of people will be on the water this bank holiday weekend — but for some it could end in tragedy .
5 But it 's important not to sweat if the clothes get wet it could cause problems . ’
6 The imagination was a powerful beast ; left unchecked it could overwhelm every other good sense a person possessed … which was exactly what had happened to her mother , she reminded herself forcibly .
7 He had forgotten how humid it could get in Beirut at that time of year .
8 ‘ Yes , I 'm sorry too , we could have made a good team , in business at least , though I realize we could never be friends or anything of that sort , but I 'm convinced it could have worked .
9 Unauthorised disclosure to the media is no longer described as a ‘ potentially serious breach of contract ’ ( see Lancet Oct 24 , 1992 , p 1031 , and Nov 21 , p 1277 for draft guidance ) , but the new advice says that if such disclosure is judged to be unjustified it could result in disciplinary action .
10 If you are very lucky it could perform all these functions at once .
11 At worst it could conclude that the Home Office pianist was doing his best and need not be shot .
12 At best , it could kill interest in learning : at worst it could foster the alienation of the young .
13 At worst it could mean many months in hospital .
14 John Seer , who 's Fire Protection Officer at Oxfordshire 's Fire Brigade , says had the dump been set alight it could have endangered life .
15 It 's analysis of the egos as , as we 've been seeing , in analysis was really all , all it could do at the beginning , after the First World War , shall we say .
16 Erm and so the army was left in a position where all it could do really was rely on its own history .
17 And so therefore all it could do was look at Aden and Palestine and Cyprus , in terms of actually , I 'm talking about the practicalities of
18 but er it was all it could do to do sixty .
19 He repeated promises that the council was doing all it could to improve the quality of life for residents in the area .
20 And although it accepted that on the whole the department did all it could to control him , on the day he assaulted a 70-year-old woman the court ruled that he had n't been properly supervised , and ordered the council to pay 700 pounds in compensation .
21 On the other hand ( there is always another hand in these matters ) I would not claim that , because I could explicate my own novel line by line , that is all it could mean , and I am well aware of the danger of inhibiting the interpretive freedom of the reader by a premature display of my own , as it were , ‘ authorised ’ interpretation .
22 If Division B could not sell all it could make at £120 , it would reject other sales once the price had dropped to just less than £90 .
23 MI6 accepted his decision with ill-grace and throughout the rest of the war did all it could to hinder the work of SOE .
24 But in a statement , a spokesman said the C&G was doing all it could to help the investors .
25 You 'll never keep it up ! the voice was back with all it could muster as vengeance .
26 Once again , Ferrari did all it could to hamper his chances , to upset his equilibrium , to seek to guarantee their own success .
27 Labour would throw away all controls , and , according to the hon. Member for Dagenham , would do all it could to encourage councils ’ to behave sensibly . ’
28 The Labour Party leadership did all it could to limit any appeal which the Left outside the Party might exercise over its members .
29 But if it 's complex it could take much longer .
30 If it is too long it could lead to an explosion of potential interpretations .
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