Example sentences of "that may be [verb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 But for all the desirability of the help that may be given in careful marriage preparation , the experience of marriage itself brings to , life many personal challenges .
2 So , please think carefully before you take an axe to any ivy and consider the harm that may be done to countless woodland birds and insects .
3 Secondly , it acts as a source of capital and labour which can be indirectly utilised by other forms of capital that may be operating in different spheres of the economy .
4 At the other end of the scale , rules would define precisely the shots that may be made for specified circumstances , confining all shots to the head and shoulders of the Member who has the floor , for example ( this solution has been adopted by the Canadian House of Commons ) .
5 I have indicated several recommended walks that may be made from parked cars , even reaching a few of the more spectacular mountain summits .
6 This is thought to facilitate moving around on twigs and branches which , for a bird that lays its eggs in nests that may be hidden in thick vegetation , is an advantage .
7 Physical indications that may be caused by defective vision : unusual head position while working ( poking forward or held sideways ) ; work held at an unusual distance or angle ; frowning , squinting or facial grimaces when trying to read ; complaints of headache or dizziness during visual activities ; covering one eye with the hand , or closing it ; aversion to bright light .
8 In addition to providing information to the Science and Engineering Research Council on the initial destinations of IT Advanced Course students completing courses in 1984 , a secondary objective was to test a method of monitoring the output from the courses that may be adopted in future years .
9 It has argued that the physical environment is the foundation on which this creation is based , but in a non-deterministic fashion : the environment provides opportunities and constraints , which are resources that may be realized in different ways by different social groups in different places .
10 It is worth noting that imaginative use of unsophisticated technology ( as discussed in Chapter 7 ) can aid this part of an investigation , enabling a large volume of activities that may be undertaken by specified functional groups to be readily summarised .
11 If British born people of minority ethnic extraction are invisible in statistics on sudden infant deaths ( or any other areas ) we lose the chance to identify accurately both health trends and the health practices that may be associated with specific morbidity or mortality .
12 Neurological abnormalities may be subtle and difficult to establish in the presence of deforming arthritis , muscular atrophy , and the neuropathy that may be associated with rheumatoid arthritis .
13 Similarly , there is no massive infiltration of the liver , as happens in portal hypertension that may be associated with haematologic disorders or amyloidosis , nor evidence of obstruction at the hepatic outflow , as observed in venoocclusive disease .
14 But it leaves it up to staff to assess the limits that may be used in given circumstances .
15 Otherwise adopt the standard procedure given in Air Pilot , and any special procedure that may be required at certain major airports .
16 For between the basic drives that may be attributed to human nature and the social structures of human culture there enters a critical indeterminacy .
17 A film is made up of a series of shots that may be photographed over various periods of time ; a ‘ take ’ that may have originally started out as three or four minutes in length may eventually be edited to a ten second shot .
18 It is not possible to discuss all of the possible specially-tailored clauses that may be needed in standard terms and conditions , but these can cover such issues as special acceptance tests , compliance with particular quality standards , or special methods of manufacture or delivery .
19 For example , knowing how may people aged between fifty and sixty are alive today , together with knowledge about the death-rate of this age group and their state of health , enables the state to plan the number of places that may be needed in residential homes for the elderly in twenty years ' time , as well as the level of home help provision that will be necessary .
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