Example sentences of "[pron] can be demonstrate that " in BNC.

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1 We will approve major motorway or trunk road investments only where it can be demonstrated that alternative transport provision can not meet the need at lower economic and environmental cost .
2 Again , it can be demonstrated that Simon 's apparently more mimetic works also exhibit the linguistically self-generating features typical of his later fiction .
3 It can be demonstrated that they go beyond mere autorepresentation , and that they contextualize in a variety of ways , as the recent autobiographical texts demonstrate .
4 He wrote recently in the GEC Journal of Science and Technology : ‘ It can be demonstrated that it is significantly cheaper to store fuel for medium to long periods and then to commit it directly to a geological repository , rather than to commit fuel to the reprocessing cycle . ’
5 Any given rise in unemployment in the winter months , therefore , can only be shown to be significant if it can be demonstrated that the rise is over and above that which is normally expected at that time of year .
6 According to SSAP 8 , to the extent there is no deferred tax liability , an ACT asset may only be shown in the accounts if it can be demonstrated that there will be sufficient profits in the next 12 months to enable the surplus to be recovered against the corporation tax thereon , bearing in mind anticipated dividends .
7 the Chairman may withhold consent to publication or disclosure where it can be demonstrated that publication or disclosure is contrary to the commercial interest of any of the Parties provided that ins such cases
8 This is acceptable only if it can be demonstrated that the method gives a reasonable approximation of the actual cost .
9 To depart substantially from them invites question unless it can be demonstrated that such departure conforms to accepted practice by rational analysis .
10 Between these two levels , risks are tolerable providing that it can be demonstrated that the cost ( in time , trouble and expense ) of reducing the risk further would be ‘ disproportionate ’ to any improvement achieved .
11 The usual answer to this is to advise the managers to subscribe their shares as early as possible in the arrangements preceding the buy-out , so it can be demonstrated that , at the time they subscribe , there is no commitment from the institutions to invest , and therefore no certainty that the buy-out will proceed .
12 It will not do so where the majority have acted in bad faith , or where class interests have not been properly identified and fairly represented ( see below ) , or where it can be demonstrated that the majority voted in favour of the scheme because of their interests as shareholders of another class or as creditors ( see Carruth v ICI [ 1937 ] AC 707 ) .
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