Example sentences of "[Wh adv] one could " in BNC.

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1 Was this the only way whereby one could exert control over an over-zealous undertaker ?
2 Mrs Hollidaye had pointed out how one could see creatures even more clearly when they were silhouetted as in a shadow cut-out .
3 In the High Court , Taylor J found it ‘ very difficult to see how one could come to any other conclusion than that J had a learning difficulty ’ .
4 The question of how one could broach the topic of reducing his responsibilities was not , then , an easy one .
5 There was an intense debate over whether auditors should have a right or a duty to report and , in either event , how one could define what exactly the auditors would be expected to volunteer .
6 Above all I fail to see how one could worship God or expand one 's religious sensibilities by looking to this past .
7 Indeed , the theodicy question as to how one could ever use such texts as a medium through which to worship God may be thought to be even more insoluble than is Schüssler Fiorenza 's finding inspiration in the early Christian community .
8 If it is accepted that we are in possession of logically adequate criteria of particular-identification , I do not see how one could deny that such criteria are ever fulfilled ; for how else would we know that they are indeed adequate ?
9 Marshall raised the question of how one could go about drawing financial-value contours on a portfolio grid .
10 One might offer the following reason why one could regard apine dance as having communicative significance lacking in the case of the bruise ; that the dance is a somehow ‘ arbitrary ’ or ‘ rule-governed ’ causal product of the sighting of food .
11 But Labour 's education chairman , Gideon Ben-Tovim , said keeping two separate age-group schools for those with physical disabilities would mean two half capacity schools when one could house all pupils .
12 The key to managing him was in keeping calm , and avoiding situations where one could be trapped and hurt .
13 So , in theory , someone of my age had half an hour of free time , although it was in fact impossible to find any place where one could be alone .
14 Hence , those separate scriptories where one could study the electronic ghosts of unrestricted documents .
15 A Hebridean island — it does sound like a place where one could work in peace , and they have actually called it an ‘ ivory tower ’ .
16 Even the novelist George Gissing , who was ‘ no friend of the people ’ and who was the most scathing critic of so many aspects of the new popular culture , has his fictional alter ego Henry Ryecroft recalling the pleasures of having been young in London , of the public houses with their ‘ pints of foaming ale ’ and the supper bars with their ‘ sausage and mash ’ , of the theatres where one could ‘ roll and hustle with the throng at the pit-door ’ , and of walking home singing as he went .
17 And there were places where one could buy such technology .
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