Example sentences of "can [be] [vb pp] [prep] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Obviously , since the filters are purely reactive , none of this power can be absorbed in them and it all reaches the terminating load in each case .
2 These may take a bit of finding — although an electronic stud detector will help — but once the batten has been secured , the kitchen cupboard ( or whatever ) can be secured to it with normal woodscrews .
3 If the right person can be found then much of the detailed work can be delegated to him .
4 Because such objects gain value as time elapses it means that a profit can be realised by anyone patient enough to conceal them for twenty years .
5 By using Green 's theorem the integral of over the rectangle PNML indicated in Figure 14.1 can be related to its line integral around the boundary .
6 There will be a number of interactive plenary sessions on the first day with discussions on the future requirements of users from a variety of industries , and on how the emerging technology can be related to their needs .
7 Provenance studies are more exact , since many grain suites carry characteristic luminescence ‘ fingerprints ’ which can be related to their source rocks ( Fig. 6.5f ) .
8 ‘ And you do n't think that can be related to his murder ? ’
9 Then all machine-dependent routines must be written as separate subroutines , with clear documentation , so that equivalent routines for another machine can be exchanged for them .
10 Instructors can be mistaken about their students ' ability to control the initial part properly if one or two launches go well .
11 Just so she can be mistaken for someone else . ’
12 I can not do not think I am can be mistaken in my belief that our meeting was also important interesting to you , and that however much you may value your seclusion
13 Secondly , it is arguable that most other theories , e.g. those based on semantic components , can be subsumed within it , in so far as they are built on consistent and logical lines .
14 Contradictions can be subsumed in something so unproblematic as the designation of places .
15 As public documents they can be scrutinised by anyone prepared to pay the search fee .
16 There are details are of the way to do this in the National Certificate ‘ Guide to Procedures ’ and advice can be sought from my staff or from Field Officers . ’
17 If sufficient evidence is available or can be generated on what has been achieved , the student should be made aware of this and be advised to prepare to communicate the findings .
18 Peterson ( 1980 ) explains that most misspellings can be generated from their correct counterparts by using these four rules , and in fact form the basis of the DEC-10 spelling corrector .
19 Rather than start from a symbol and find what sentences can be generated from it , one can begin with a sentence and a grammar , and find a way of generating that sentence .
20 It is similar to Ostertagia spp. and can be differentiated by its greater length ( up to 2.0 cm ) .
21 It can be shown that semantic network representations are formally equivalent to semantic feature representations , in as much as any information that can be represented in one can be represented in the other .
22 A member of the committee can be represented by someone else provided that person is holding a letter of authority duly signed by the member ( r 6.156 ) .
23 The towers of ventilating shafts can be seen above its course .
24 It is in this future that perhaps partnerships can be seen for what they are , a new kind of relationship in which power is shared rather than used to fight others .
25 Joint working can be seen across our programme .
26 The Benin heads are represented with crowns or have the hair modelled and no traces of sprues can be seen on their tops .
27 When water is running it enhances the village aspect and in spring flotillas of ducklings can be seen on it .
28 She argues that young children 's cognitive and linguistic abilities can be seen at their best in situations involving intentions , motives , or purposes — situations which make human sense .
29 The dangers of such an approach can be seen at its most extreme in Gordon Rattray Taylor 's neo-Freudian interpretation of Sex in History : ‘ The history of civilisation is the history of a long warfare between the dangerous and powerful drives and the systems of taboos and inhibitions which man has erected to control them ’ .
30 A glimpse of his flamboyant lifestyle can be seen at his former Nottinghamshire home , NEWSTEAD ABBEY , a beautifully preserved tribute to this great Romantic .
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