Example sentences of "[pers pn] [is] [adv] conceivable that " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It 's just conceivable that room might pop up in some other picture some day . ’
2 It 's just conceivable that one or other of those houses was passed on to another organisation …
3 and indeed in terms of the low figure of of of thirty one thousand it it 's statistically conceivable that no local needs would be met .
4 It is likewise conceivable that TFIIA is incorporated into the transcription complex by protein-protein interactions involving TBP and/or the established pol III transcription factors IIIA , IIIB and IIIC .
5 It is surely conceivable that she heard and had pity on us …
6 It is even conceivable that in the future the bubble policy may be applied to an entire city .
7 Purcell thought highly enough of this little improvement to write it into his own song-book as an emendation : so it is scarcely conceivable that he would have allowed the original , unimproved version to go into a score being copied under his own supervision for a revival — especially given that the effect of the improvement itself was theatrical rather than primarily musical .
8 It is also conceivable that there are still natural laws which are still to be discovered and named .
9 It is also conceivable that if one strays across a band because a property has been improved to the tune of approximately £10,000 , one will not have to pay much extra .
10 It is also conceivable that some constraints might have to be placed upon communications within computer networks .
11 No doubt many , probably a majority , of the cases of non-gonococcal urethritis are due to infectious organisms , but there remains a hard core of cases from which no pathogenic germs can be isolated and for which it is just conceivable that antibiotic treatment may not be the best therapy .
12 It is just conceivable that something like this might have happened had there been a Communist government in France .
13 It is just conceivable that the Inland Revenue , thicketed about with legislation and case law , might think these provisions of the Income Tax Acts had some concern for a transaction of that nature , but that is hardly a view which could be shared by one who got out and looked at the wood as a whole .
14 It is perfectly conceivable that British upland farmers with their different concept of ‘ viability ’ are recognising certain unquantifiable benefits from farming and incomes .
15 It is perfectly conceivable that we can make some general statements about the conditions that influence our self-indulgence or self-restraint in relation to rules laid down and enforced by the state , particularly when the nature of those rules and the way they are enforced are included for consideration .
16 9 in Chapter 5 , it is perfectly conceivable that Keynesian ( demand deficient ) unemployment is consistent with a real wage which is at its market clearing value , w * ; .
17 This monocausal approach had the advantage of clarity of distinction but it could be highly misleading as a guide to macroeconomic policy since it is perfectly conceivable that classical and Keynesian unemployment may coexist at one and the same time .
18 If such varied symptoms can be the result of a single defect , or of one or two related defects , it is quite conceivable that a homoeopathic remedy , acting to eliminate the block , can have equally far-reaching effects .
19 At the same time it must be remembered that the occupations of a quarter of the inhabitants were not stated ; some of them must have been farmers , and it is quite conceivable that many of the omissions were the result of uncertainty as to whether or not to class the persons in question as agricultural or industrial .
20 You could use the same monitor for either , so it is quite conceivable that institutions would in the future include both among their video equipment .
21 They also point out that when the SML has a negative slope it is quite conceivable that inefficiently diversified trusts could outperform the market portfolio .
22 And while Taiwan prohibits the export of antiques ( items over one hundred years old ) , it does allow the import of antiques for exhibition purposes ; it is therefore conceivable that the government might alter its restrictions to allow antiques to be imported for sale and subsequent export ’ .
23 Not even a special building was required , for since the Master was , as required by the will , a priest in Holy Orders singing masses for his patron at an altar in the Parish Church , it is entirely conceivable that the School 's first home was somewhere in that Church .
  Next page