Example sentences of "[adv] can be [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But much can be done with the interpretation . ’
2 But because such systems are modular , much can be done with simple commands .
3 However , much can be done by the teachers themselves at very little cost to the department .
4 Although some expense may be involved , much can be done by the class teacher in the day-to-day management of the classroom .
5 While it is true that the spores can easily hop over the garden fence , and there is not a lot to be done about sources of infection further along the road , much can be done by being entirely ruthless in cleaning up your fallen leaves and rose debris .
6 Sometimes there is no coherent pattern in a time series and not much can be done by way of analysis other than elementary smoothing .
7 Not all environmental improvement , however , requires large expenditure and much can be done by careful design and painstaking attention to the detail of operations .
8 Much can be gained by assessing the way a candidate puts him/herself .
9 Much can be gained by assessing the way a candidate puts him/herself forward in his or her own paper — ie good presentation .
10 As we have learned elsewhere , much can be gained by examining residuals , here called the rough .
11 It is doubtful whether much can be gained by trying to achieve any greater precision than that suggested in the definitions above .
12 Much can be gained from the openness of communication and willingness to learn from others
13 Much can be gained from the openness of communication and willingness to learn from others .
14 Most drainage schemes should have some regard for the importance to wildlife of these areas , and much can be achieved on quite small areas .
15 Much can be achieved within present resources by doing things differently ( sometimes radically so ) .
16 All were answered at length in a meticulous hand and , from a closer study of these letters , much can be learned of this gardener who was to be acknowledged as the greatest of his time .
17 So much can be learned by watching and copying .
18 Many different approaches can be adopted to the analysis of bureaucratic behaviour , and much can be learned from the work on administrative science and political sociology .
19 But much can be inferred from statistics of births in any year to women who already have 0 , 1 , 2 , etc. children ( figure 4.13 ) .
20 So much can be conveyed by putting your arms around someone 's shoulders or giving them a kiss .
21 Much can be learnt from periods when there is a greater quantity of written information , and books such as C. E. Challis , The Tudor Coinage ( 1978 ) , C. M. Cipolla , Money in Sixteenth-Century Florence ( 1986 ) and E. Besly , English Civil War Coin Hoards ( 1987 ) are very illuminating and can reveal many of the potential pitfalls of analysing coin evidence from earlier periods .
22 Much can be learnt from past disasters .
23 As Mr. Richards says , much of the procedure stems from the relevant statutes and regulations , and much can be gleaned from A Guide to the Award of Costs in Criminal Proceedings ( R.C.J. ( 1991 ) H.M.S.O. ) , which contains a section ( Section 6 ) on ‘ Wasted Costs and Orders …
24 The claim that no spelling unit smaller than the word but bigger than the grapheme is used when we read non-words aloud can be tested with non-words like gean , geak , and gead .
25 For a start , making love does not have to consist of vaginal penetration ; and time spent reassuring , cuddling , caressing , fantasising and laughing together can be enjoyed for its own sake , or to reduce the tension so that you can relax sufficiently to enjoy intercourse .
26 Single-note harmonics only can be played by the right hand .
27 The six killer diseases not only CAN be brought under control by the end of 1990 .
28 The information included in can be exploited by agents to tighten up their subjective prediction for .
29 Indeed , the measure of the difficulty they were in can be seen in their own statement of 6 August in defence of their lack of achievement , made on the very day they had been disappointed by Cecil 's letter ; for Knox was inscribing a letter from Argyll and lord James to Sir James Croft , captain of Berwick , saying that they were ‘ sorry to be judged slow , negligent and cold in our proceedings … .
30 If too much is spent on buildings , not enough can be spent on personnel to care for people .
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