Example sentences of "be [verb] through " in BNC.

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1 This networking of previously lone individuals and groups will be highlighted through a number of networking facilities including the innovative Networking Game .
2 We also have some evidence ( see , for example , Whyte , 1986 ) that this may be a learned difference which can be altered through appropriate educational experiences .
3 Elsewhere , it is likely that the original boundaries between the fields will only be recognized through extensive survey and excavation .
4 Though consent , if valid , has normative consequences , and can only be explained through its purported normative consequences , it does not bear its normativeness on its face .
5 Mathematics can be explained through the written word ‘ We went to the main road at 10.00 am to begin our traffic count .
6 Contemporary Marxist structuralists arguably confuse voluntarism ( the notion that individuals have unconstrained choices ) with methodological individualism ( the notion that social phenomena should be explained through the intended and unintended consequences of human actors making choices within constrained feasible sets of options ) .
7 Such enemy forces based in Korea could be neutralised through air action .
8 Anthropologists and others have produced evidence of the range of languages and institutions within which ‘ scientific progress ’ has been made , as in the mix of mathematics and astrology in ancient Greece ( Goody , 1977 , p. 17 ) , and of geometry and the building of sacred altars in ancient India ( Parry , 1982 , p. 23 ) , while in Europe developments can be traced through a number of traditions , of which the essayist tradition is only one .
9 More personal links can be traced through Sir Ernest Benn , the founder of the Society for Individual Freedom , who , in addition to being a good friend of Allen , was also the publisher of Hewart 's The New Despotism .
10 She considers the idea , implicit in much feminist theory , of an authentic self which is said to be socially conditioned by patriarchal power , and argues that this idea owes much to a tradition in Western philosophy which dates back to the Aristotelian distinction between actions that are voluntary and actions which are coerced , a tradition that can be traced through Descartes to the present time .
11 All three groups , being sea-dwellers , have left behind abundant remains and the details of their separate dynastic fortunes can be traced through the rocks for hundreds of millions of years .
12 as a linear , uni-directional , push-and-pull , cause-effect movement but as a circular , interdependent , progressively complex , and self-modifying system in which the effect of changes in one part can be traced through the whole of the system
13 Amendments , etc. , can be traced through two Current Law Statute Citators , one for 1947–1971 , and one for 1971 onwards .
14 Australian cases can be traced through the Australian Digest , Canadian through the Canadian Abridgement , New Zealand through the Abridgement of New Zealand Case Law .
15 Its foundation as the capital of Scotland in the late eleventh century , and its development in the following centuries into a distinctive city crowded on a hill within a defensive wall can be traced through its buildings .
16 Only those ideas which can be traced through many different formulations on depression in the seventy years since Freud 's book was published are touched upon here .
17 Desmond Morris claims that his biomorphs " evolve " in his mind , and that their evolution can be traced through successive paintings .
18 Instructional holidays likewise can be traced through the British Horse Society or the Association of British Riding Schools .
19 One very early sign of a more positive attitude , arguing that physical ageing could be delayed through a plentiful diet , regular sleep and short naps , and moderate exercise including riding and dancing , is Francis Bacon 's History of Life and Death ( 1623 ) .
20 There appeared to be limited evidence that some sleep disorders might be connected with sudden retirement ( Cowan 1956 ) and that disability and senility might be delayed through the prolonging of an active working life ( Thompson 1949 ; Shenfield 1963 ) .
21 the reception of Derrida 's work , perhaps more than that of any other recent French thinker , has been marked by an astonishingly casual and unquestioning acceptance of certain extremely condensed — not to say sloganistic — characterisations of the history of Western thought , as if this history could be dismissed through its reduction to a set of perfunctory dualisms .
22 As the trial was a comparison of two systems of care the prompted care group subjects could be referred through the system to hospital outpatients , while the hospital clinic group patients could consult their general practitioner for diabetes related reasons .
23 Well , people tend to be referred through the psychiatric services as they currently exist locally , er or through their G P .
24 Advice on opportunities in the new area can be given through counselling .
25 Replies can be given through the column only .
26 This goal could be realised through making education more widely available .
27 Essentially the project will assess the question of whether a competitive advantage can be sustained through planned technological change .
28 There is some suggestion that psychic communication can flow more easily along strata than across them and a true link can thus be formed through the Earth between those sites on similar strata .
29 Such bonds may build up before either party is fully aware of the connection , for they can be formed through a process of initiative and response at a very deep level .
30 Essentially , this view of people as each one partly creating his own moral world is to be justified through arguments concerning the nature of morality and moral knowledge .
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