Example sentences of "could [adv] [vb infin] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Er but again y'know I could in theory provide some handouts for you which you could perhaps pick up at the end of the er of the lecture from the front or even have available in a general office for you , okay ?
2 And as everything slipped away she could only hold on to the thought that somehow her murderer knew who she was .
3 He also says that Caesar started off in the lower classes and built himself up to where he stood and could only look down on the lower classes by turning his back on his friends and former colleagues .
4 With Skinny Puppy signed to a major , it looks like they could soon break out of the cult ghetto .
5 With Skinny Puppy signed to a major , it looks like they could soon break out of the cult ghetto .
6 The movies succeeded because people could just walk in from the streets but from the beginning everything was done to ensure that as many people as possible were brought in .
7 But the way he 's going he could just end up as the next Vinnie Jones .
8 If you could just turn over to the next card now Bill .
9 Gone were the days when she could just get up in the morning , make coffee , leave a note for Mrs Bennett and go off to Brentwoods with , maybe , the anticipation of quite an exciting day .
10 In choosing a kasabat kadilik , then , a student was in effect shutting himself off from the high offices of state and , provided that he intended to stay within the learned profession , dooming himself to a lifetime of service in the kasabat kadiliks unless he could somehow get back into the medrese stream .
11 Do you do you think erm your father when he started the shop in twenty six , would ever imagined that it could possibly go on to the the end of the century ?
12 If the quality of bottom-up information was good , the algorithm could quickly home in on the correct sequence of words .
13 WHILE the Ipswich fans taunted ‘ You 're going down with the Arsenal ’ , Town star John Wark predicted that troubled Manchester United could still walk off with the first Premier League Championship .
14 So it was a case there , and course at the end of the day you rolled the little roll up , put elastic round and stood them up in a file and they stood there like little soldiers and you could always go back to the actual time , sometimes you found a man had n't re erm signed on , he 'd just gone and joined his bus up in town centre , well you , that was er subject of another letter .
15 We could always go along to the ward-room . ’
16 If you want gourmet cooking you could always scout around in the village and see what you can get !
17 Well , if all else failed , she could always bleed out of the window , she thought , with a mordant shrug .
18 Said Quinn , ‘ With my name I could always string along with the Irish — my father was Irish and my mother Mexican .
19 If we ca n't see anything more unusual suppose we could always fall back on the bubble baths or the anyway I think that 's a bit more than but there you go .
20 Gough could always write back to the Scottish League — as he is obliged to do this week in response to the management committee 's request for his views on United 's complaint over Ferguson — and point out that being forced to go to such lengths to contain his opponent proves he was correct to covet the forward for his team .
21 Oh yes I wa as kids er , I used to , I could always get in with the , the conductresses .
22 If the backpack gets too heavy , of course , you could always canoe back down the river to Chepstow !
23 But she , she could bleeding dress up to the nines .
24 A new building could also face up to the logistical problems presented by so much contemporary art : vast canvases , dispersed installations , massive weights ( the Serra sculptures currently on show required the floor to be shored up ) , and ultra-sensitive materials .
25 But changes in the home could also come about through the affairs of other family members .
26 ’ You could probably get back into the FedPol .
27 The youth drew the pirogue up the grey sand and crept forward to the clearing , and stood , trying to piece together the disorder that he could dimly pick out in the darkness .
28 Perhaps we could now move on to the question of Sir Conrad 's recent involvement in the club 's affairs ? ’
29 George Bush could now cash in on the country 's post-war confidence by launching another war on the black home-front .
30 Thomas could now look back on the papers he had begun , or completed and sold in his first two terms , as ‘ vain stuff ’ but he continued to write verses , which were sent to Harry and Helen .
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