Example sentences of "it can also be [vb pp] that " in BNC.

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1 It can also be said that the use of delegated legislation is desirable : ( a ) it allows a certain flexibility in the law .
2 It can also be said that , unlike Winckelmann , Hölderlin has some intuitive appreciation of the Greek spirit 's darker depths to which Nietzsche will later attach the name " flionysiac " — although Hölderlin gives them no such definition , and only in the last draft of his unfinished dramatic poem , The Death of Empedocles , do these depths receive a comparably urgent emphasis .
3 It can also be argued that the economists ' justification for aid has never been its real rationale , but that political considerations of strategic security by the donors have conditioned its distribution and nature , in some cases even allowing military support to be classified as aid .
4 It can also be argued that there are many references in the Old Testament to conditions that may well have been syphilis .
5 It can also be argued that the error present in this data , given its crudity , would swamp any of the other data .
6 It can also be argued that other candidates for possible exclusion are those who are unfit for work for one reason or another .
7 Here one may note that while , eventually , it was France who not only defined Vietnam but also the character of Vietnamese resistance , it can also be argued that in the impact of the first two revolutionary events of the 2Oth century experienced in Vietnam , the inspiration came from Asia itself .
8 It can also be argued that all pension and retirement benefits schemes should be fully subject to sex discrimination law .
9 From a different perspective it can also be argued that it is right and proper that , for example , the Mandarins of the civil service should have power , because , after all , they have the expertise and knowledge in government matters .
10 However , it can also be argued that the ‘ bullion famine ’ did not have such a catastrophic effect because merchants could use credit instead of cash to keep their businesses running .
11 But it can also be argued that the employer 's influence is small , compared with the influence exercised by individuals ' education , occupation , and political affiliation , all of which are matters decided outside of employment .
12 It can also be concluded that these Killing-Cauchy horizons are unstable against small but generic perturbations of the initial data and that , in a very precise sense , ‘ generic ’ initial data always produce all-embracing space-like curvature singularities .
13 It can also be seen that the transformation ( 12.1 ) is equivalent to adding to V the Stoyanov solution ( 10.29 ) .
14 It can also be seen that the singularity structure of this solution is the same as that of the Khan-Penrose solution .
15 In this case , it can also be seen that the new and initial solutions have the same singularity structure .
16 It can also be seen that it provides a deeper cause than that supplied by ordinary , everyday reasoning .
17 It can also be seen that there is a negligible relationship between relative frequency and coverage .
18 From Fig. 4C it can also be seen that pou[c] binds to the oligonucleotides A , B and C which all contain the motif TAATGAG/TAT , but no binding to the octamer oligonucleotide D and the mutant octamer oligonucleotide M is seen ( lanes 11–15 ) .
19 It can also be seen that the B II minima are more sharply defined than the B I state .
20 It can also be seen that in reality the UK economy is an open one , with a foreign sector .
21 It can also be suggested that it was contradicted by another case heard shortly afterwards but which concerned homeworkers not casual workers ( the " Gardiner and Taverna case " ) which was resolved very differently .
22 It can also be shown that a general equation for an ellipse is of the form :
23 It can also be shown that this family of solutions has the same singularity structure as the class of Szekeres solutions as described in Section 9.3 and to which it reduces when .
24 It can also be shown that , if the seed solution is colinear so that we can put , then the transformation ( 12.12 ) reduces to the transformation suggested by Ray ( 1980 ) as corrected by Halilsoy ( 1981 ) .
25 It can also be shown that smooth-fronted electromagnetic waves would generate smooth-fronted or step gravitational waves that would persist through the interaction region .
26 It can also be shown that there is a bounded set , which depends on the parameters , which all trajectories eventually enter and thereafter remain within { 21 , 35 } .
27 It can also be added that if these steps deform towards more negative values of ε-ζ ( around -100° rather than their naturally stable values of roughly -30° ) the associated inter-proton distances hardly change , however the sugar phases resemble those of the B II state and are therefore once again in disagreement with the NMR data .
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