Example sentences of "as it can be [verb] " in BNC.

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1 I want to do this thing as well as it can be done , and with as few deaths as we can manage .
2 As soon as it can be done , I will send it . ’
3 As it can be seen from Table 1 , expert systems have certain fundamental disadvantages against human experts .
4 Insofar as it can be seen through the confusion of the Alpine orogenesis , this situation is widespread in the Mediterranean lands .
5 Best-selling novelist , short story writer , occasional teacher of creative writing ‘ insofar as it can be taught ’ .
6 ‘ Our inspiration is totally with rural life as it can be lived , ’ Laura wrote some years later .
7 These rules mean that it might benefit the owner of a topography right for him to sit on that right until such a time as it can be exploited to its full potential as long as this is done a reasonable period before the 15 years have expired .
8 As it can be noted in the present study , we avoided the use of this terminology .
9 ‘ And we 'll be married , ’ he murmured , ‘ just as soon as it can be arranged . ’
10 This job is now completed and we are hoping to hold a short ‘ opening ’ ceremony as soon as it can be arranged .
11 Whether you want to or not , you 're leaving here just as soon as it can be arranged .
12 ‘ As soon as it can be arranged . ’
13 ‘ As soon as it can be arranged .
14 We recognise this and we are determined to achieve a transport system which is as safe as it can be made while still remaining effective .
15 In the field of New Testament studies , it is as if each new discovery , each new assertion , is swallowed up as quickly as it can be made .
16 However before we embark on that , there are two outstanding matters which were raised yesterday a and I 'd just like to know how far erm progress has been made in dealing with those and one was the erm definition as far as it can be made of what is meant by the Greater York area .
17 Human behaviour enters social reality in so far as it can be given a meaning .
18 We have examined these processes in three different areas : perception as far as it can be determined from neurophysiological and laterality studies , remembering in a short-term memory context , and organisation in recall as it occurs in story-telling .
19 So make London as nice a place to run as it can be to visit .
20 The time-honoured foam filter is a good beginner 's choice , and an excellent back-up to other systems , especially as it can be matured ( build-up a working population of bacteria ) in the tank at the same time as other systems — then moved into action at the required time should a back-up or quarantine tank become necessary .
21 In addition , hyssop is an excellent treatment for bruising around the eyes ; crush a handful of fresh leaves into a clean handkerchief , dip this quickly into boiling water , and apply locally as hot as it can be tolerated .
22 Taking in too much protein will result in you putting on weight , as it can be converted to fat .
23 It can also amount to a fundamental critique of the student 's core discipline and , therefore , has to be handled with care , as it can be unsettling .
24 Taking it as far as it can be taken , Hegel suggests that the conflict between myself and the person in whom my identity resides will become a struggle between life and death , because , he says , it is only by risking one 's life that one becomes fully aware of oneself as a free , autonomous individual .
25 City streets have also provided Matthew Carr with material , though now he has abandoned his old habit of pulling people in off the pavement , ‘ as it can be taken the wrong way ’ .
26 Take care when removing the surround , especially if it 's very old , as it can be sold if it 's in good condition .
27 Yet , in so far as it can be pinned down , this is the sort of crime fiction that many writers today want to write , and many , many readers want to read .
28 Even where a trustee has misappropriated trust property the fund may still preserve its identity , and , so long as it can be identified , the rights of the beneficiaries will attach to the fund into whatever form it may have been converted by him .
29 Hinshaw makes a distinction between the ‘ cognitive ’ and ‘ evocative ’ contents of knowledge suggesting that the ‘ truth ’ , at the semantic and syntactic levels , can be considered in isolation from the social basis of knowledge in so far as it can be shown to be cognitive rather than evocative .
30 The fractional-order beam intensities can be written , by analogy with holography , as It can be shown that the first and second terms are actually the squares of amplitudes of scattered waves , and their major components have lower frequencies than do the third and the last terms , and can therefore be suppressed ( refs 8 , 14 ; P.H. and D.A.K. , unpublished results ) .
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