Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] can be [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 Specific shapes can be related to if desired , as shown in figure 9.8a and b .
2 The spatial units can be related to census areas in a number of ways , though none is judged to be very satisfactory .
3 SCOTVEC representatives gave an assurance that the results of the survey would be taken into account in considering areas where further improvements can be made to National Certificate procedures and practices .
4 Genealogy develops the possibility broached in the Archaeology that in a general history different significances can be accorded to events , depending on ‘ their correlation with other previous or simultaneous events , discursive or not ’ .
5 A further 5,000 unfamiliar words can be added to the system , along with up to 99 standard paragraphs that can be called in as required .
6 You can now hang the new radiator on its brackets , and check that the old valves can be connected to the valve tails .
7 Similarly , old cars can be reduced to they , and crash violently to disappeared ( the sentence as a whole is not reducible ) .
8 You will , I am sure , appreciate that now that the contract for the Ski Centre is subject to Competitive Tender , only commercially sound concessions can be offered to groups such as the Scottish Universities .
9 Existing direct cylinders can be upgraded to indirect — see below .
10 ( Whether old people living in residential homes can be said to be living in the community is a separate issue , some aspects of which are considered in Chapter 7 . )
11 Some certificates can be linked to attainment targets in the National Curriculum .
12 Over half the issues of British public libraries can be ascribed to recreational reading , although — as will be seen — public libraries are rarely arranged to suit the recreational approach .
13 From published tables can be related to , and M w is calculated from the 90° scattering then corrected by multiplication with .
14 However , they do involve exploring the role of knowledge and ideas in society and do not accept that all aspects of social relations can be reduced to the economic relations of the mode of production .
15 Its nature , in scientific terms can be likened to a ‘ paradigm ’ .
16 If charismatic political leaders can be inculcated and socialized into democratic values , then public bureaucracies can be subordinated to the elites generated by party competition , creating the only feasible approximation to a genuine representative democracy .
17 After submitting the DC , no further modifications can be made to it , so it is necessary to be sure that no further changes are required .
18 According to falsificationism , some theories can be shown to be false by an appeal to the results of observation and experiment .
19 However , Mr Baron also ordered a review of the rules regarding disturbances in parliament sessions to ensure that tougher sanctions can be applied to members causing disruptions in future .
20 They demonstrated that the crust of the Earth can be divided into seven large plates , and many smaller ones , and that all major crustal processes can be related to the relative movements between these plates .
21 These contrasting strands can be expected to be found within the same minds .
22 Some propositions can be subjected to experimental test and the results used in the creation of an extended thesis or alternatively an antithesis .
23 The theoretical results can be subjected to specific mathematical tests ( concerning the spectrum of the motion , cf .
24 Many different approaches can be adopted to the analysis of bureaucratic behaviour , and much can be learned from the work on administrative science and political sociology .
25 New historicism is most concerned with the late Foucault , in particular with representations and mechanisms of power , the means through which cultural artefacts can be shown to be not passive reflectors of the history of their time but active producers of it .
26 Chromatograms are automatically analysed and detailed reports can be tailored to the application .
27 Some stoves can be pegged to the ground .
28 Some caputs can be seen to be the logical successors to Roman and pre-Roman sites , the latter remaining as hillforts which may have been reoccupied in post-Roman times .
29 A range of possible responses can be presented to members matching , some overall view of priorities .
30 Studies of rural migration have largely neglected these factors although Dunn ( 1979 ) has shown that a substantial amount of short-distance movement in rural areas can be attributed to changing housing needs .
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