Example sentences of "information could be [verb] " in BNC.

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1 This information could be obtained from payroll files — accuracy could be assured as salaries are checked carefully each month by the individual employees as they receive their pay slips !
2 This raised questions about when ( and how ) enough information could be applied to distinguish a single hypothesis from competing interpretations .
3 ‘ There is a possibility that some information could be lost to us forever — but at the moment we do n't really know .
4 And the requirements of democracy for full information could be quashed as a threat to national security .
5 It arose from the digitisation of archived paper records of previous international surveys , so that the information could be stored on computer and made accessible to modern techniques of data retrieval , image analysis and interpretation .
6 If information could be transmitted from here to a Centauri in less time than this , it would effectively be travelling back into the past .
7 Shortly afterwards , the Ministry of Health suggested that birth control information could be given at maternal and child welfare centres on medical grounds .
8 This information could be given to the members of the company as a separate statement .
9 This degree of organisation was sufficient to allow them to remember a large part of the information in the passage so that when the theme was finally presented the remembered information could be re-structured .
10 The Minister said that he understood the points that we were making and would undertake a close examination to find out what information could be made available .
11 A vast amount of information could be collected about the instinctive and emotional development of the normal child and its relation to his intellectual growth and interests ’ .
12 Your information could be to do with other people : knowing what –heir capabilities are , what motivates them , where they have influence .
13 It is not enough to say that the visual system must contain edge detectors , one also has to say how edge information could be reconstructed from the retinal image and how far the units in the CNS that appear to respond to edges do , in fact , operate according to these computational principles .
14 If organisations operated through the exercise of what Alan Fox has termed ‘ high trust ’ relationships between both managers and operators , and among operators themselves , then much of the necessary co-ordination and flow of information could be handled informally and on the basis of good will ( Fox 1974 ) .
15 Now the pathology is by a chief information and i in fact , the chief information could be provoked merely by the presence of organisms .
16 They frustrate the interviewer who wants to know specific tangible facts about the past to assess how this information could be utilised in the future .
17 The messenger role , for example , has the function of bringing information ; but that information could be brought by a beggar or a King .
18 For example , a network of hard disc multimedia kiosks each delivering highly current product information could be refreshed daily by point-to-multipoint broadcasts of data from a satellite .
19 The Court of Appeal made it clear that an employer could not use a restrictive covenant in an employment contract to protect confidential information unless that information could be classified as a trade secret or equivalent .
20 That is , information could be produced for the entire Read-off , all posts in a particular employing location , all posts in a given function , etc .
21 However , if such information was available at the outset , further questions would be asked to determine if the form of the information could be improved by manual or other methods ( Fig 11.16 ) .
22 Medicine , while still based on plants , became more and more sophisticated as knowledge accumulated , especially with the introduction of printing , which meant that information could be passed on exactly , instead of inaccurately , by hearsay , and thus provided a bigger and bigger base from which to work .
23 The information could be assembled as in Blocks A , B and C.
24 But he also pointed out that if this information could be included in the published part of the report , it would do much to reassure members of the public who feel uneasy about interception .
25 To reach such a target audience we probably need , at the minimum , ( a ) about two pages of description by the authors of each unit , telling the user how to load the program , how to drive it , and its limitations both educationally and technically this information could be included on the disc or tape that loads the program ( b ) some incentive to the programmer to document the program to this level , perhaps through its resulting acceptance into a ‘ library ’ ( c ) assurance from those receiving the program that they will be prepared to deal with the problems that such draft programs impose — this implies that they must be fairly competent users of their computer system : they could not expect to get software support from the author , who is likely to be another teacher whose time is fully occupied ( d ) some financial and organizational support for the distribution of programs , even if only on a cooperative basis ( e ) that users of such programs should undertake to report to the authors ( and to the library ? ) on the usefulness of each program received , and if they wish , to make recommendations for improvement .
26 This is shown clearly by Schedule 3 , by section 38 , and by sections 82 to 84 , and Mr. Philipson 's argument to the contrary , suggesting that the Schedule 3 information could be clothed in anonymity , carries no weight and is not in accordance with the terms of the Act itself ; indeed the identity of a borrower might well be relevant in some cases on the issue of prudence .
27 ( 3 ) Batch input screens ( eg absence and overtime ) where more than one employee 's information could be updated using the same input screen ( updated overnight ) .
28 Where nothing is forthcoming for a word position , shape and length could be used along with higher level information to select potential words ; where some characters are suggested these could be used in addition to this information ; if only one or two letter positions in a word have no candidates , shape information could be used to select letter candidates , along with the restrictions provided by the adjacent letters .
29 General word shape information could be used in addition .
30 Both syntactic and semantic information could be used more effectively than at present .
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