Example sentences of "can be drawn [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | One of the great distinctions that can be drawn between football culture in Scotland and England is in the public 's attitude to heroes . |
2 | The relationships between the Variscides of Europe and the Appalachians of North America — and indeed between parts of the Appalachian province itself — are still a subject for controversy at a detailed level ( see Dewey 1982 ; Rast 1984 ; also several papers in Hutton and Sanderson 1984 ) , but it seems that useful , if cautious , parallels can be drawn between the partly concealed Variscides of Europe ( including southern England ) and the well exposed and much studied southern Appalachians ( Fig. 1 ) . |
3 | A close analogy can be drawn between cancer of the cell and a society hooked on drugs . |
4 | Parkin agrees with Marxists on one point , that no distinction can be drawn between state power and class power in liberal democracies . |
5 | I will also seek to show how many parallels can be drawn between the arguments used to legitimate corporate managerial power and the arguments used in administrative law to explain , control and legitimate the power conferred upon administrative bodies . |
6 | A bald statement that the exercise of public functions may be challenged by judicial review does not , however , tell us all there is to know about the sort of decisions which are amenable to judicial review ; and so now we must consider a number of distinctions which can be drawn between types of public functions . |
7 | It may be that a distinction can be drawn between two different groups of provisions . |
8 | In many ways a parallel can be drawn between this river-borne Russian penetration and conquest of Siberian with its combination of raiding and trading , and the invasion of the original land of the Slavs by the Varangians eight centuries before . |
9 | But their Lordships do not accept that any analogy can be drawn between those cases and the instant case . |
10 | A further distinction can be drawn between what is given and what is new in a message . |
11 | A useful two-way distinction can be drawn between those monies which are unrestricted and those which are restricted . |
12 | Another study , analysing search negotiations between librarians and users and the subsequent search process , shows that certain parallels can be drawn between the matching and contextual approaches adopted by the users of the PRECIS index . |
13 | A parallel can be drawn between this and the way we view the children in our care . |
14 | Their place is taken by geodesics which are the straightest lines that can be drawn between a pair of points in a curved space and as such have no component of curvature in that space . |
15 | I suggest to the Solicitor-General that a clear intellectual distinction can be drawn between evidence that relates to those who are parties to a trial and those who are not parties to a trial . |
16 | No hard and fast line can be drawn between the workers who are and those who are not to be counted amongst ‘ the poor ’ ; there is a constant flux , and besides those who suffer from chronic underpayment , artisans , as well as tradesmen and rustics , are constantly sinking , with or without their own fault , into the depth of misery . |
17 | In the first place , as noted in section 1.2 , a boundary can be drawn between deictic issues and wider sociolinguistic ones . |
18 | However , a distinction can be drawn between such technical terms of art and legal jargon . |
19 | If children can be drawn into normal conversation with adults as they work together , the ideas and experience which they assimilate will begin to have more meaning for them . |
20 | An ounce can be drawn into a fine wire some fifty miles long , suitable for making delicate chains and filigree as well as threads for gold lace or tissue . |
21 | Despite these potential distortions , certain conclusions can be drawn about global income distribution . |
22 | These exercises were essentially discrete studies in their own right , and , whilst certain conclusions can be drawn about the complementary nature of the different approaches , taken overall , the study also highlights the importance of merging systems thinking with real-world considerations . |
23 | Similar conclusions can be drawn about the number of jobs held in an average career but there remain marked differences according to age , educational background , gender and size of firm . |
24 | From this discussion the following conclusions can be drawn about the nature of communications : |
25 | What conclusions can be drawn about the ‘ pyramiding ’ of taxes ? |
26 | Three generalizations can be drawn about voting behaviour in the four general elections held in the period from 1950 to 1959 : |
27 | A similar conclusion can be drawn for player II . |
28 | Bills can be drawn for almost any amount but the maximum usually negotiated is £500,000 . |
29 | Room sizes are usually provided on the particulars , and a better sketch can be drawn at home . |
30 | However , there is in addition a standard objection which holds that no such lessons can be drawn at all , at least in any directly logical way , since any project of deriving ethical content from premisses of evolutionary theory commits the ‘ naturalistic fallacy ’ , an error which is today often equated with that of trying to derive ought from is . |