Example sentences of "[noun sg] can [adv] be divorce from " in BNC.

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1 Religion can not be divorced from morality in his view for it is belief in an ordered moral government of the universe and when we lose our basis in morality we cease to be religious .
2 The same does not apply to the view that religion can not be divorced from a form of morality .
3 It is not the same sort of task as that of the natural scientist in search of hidden causes , because the context of action can not be divorced from the actors ' understanding of the context .
4 The low status accorded to the work can not be divorced from the fact that so many of those who provide tending services are women .
5 We can now see that the law and order issue can not be divorced from the rest of the Conservative Government 's policies during the Thatcher years .
6 In the same way that law can not be divorced from morality neither can economics .
7 For myself , I remain convinced that private morality can not be divorced from public and environmental moralities and I predict that the politics of the future will have to lay greater stress on this area of life .
8 For the teacher who favours the process model , a development like study skills or reading for leisure would hardly be seen as extra to the curriculum , and for some , even the enhancement of the physical environment can not be divorced from those learning experiences in which education consists : that is to say , " the medium is the message " ( McLuhan cited in Postman and Weingarter , 1971 ) .
9 The formulation of defence policy can not be divorced from economic and foreign policy issues of concern to a wide assortment of bureaucratic interests : Ministry of Foreign Affairs , KGB , Council of Ministers — not to speak of a variety of State Committees , Institutes of the Academy of Sciences , Gosplan and the Military-Industrial Commission .
10 This is a further reason why the renewal of the Church can not be divorced from evangelism .
11 It is important to remember that the question of merchantability can not be divorced from the contract description .
12 So the schematism of form can not be divorced from the schematic relation between the ideas being presented .
13 ( b ) to be able to appreciate the interlinking of everything and the force of cumulative evidence , and that what is done and learnt in school can not be divorced from what happens outside ; ( c ) to appreciate that religion challenges head-on any view that regards knowledge as something only arrived at by reasoning and scientific experimentation ; ( d ) to be concerned about conviction for or against religion , but to be open to evidence and to experience — not to have the answers all neatly sewn up , but to see life as a journey of exploration with exciting prospects and a sense of fulfilment in actually moving forward and , if necessary , changing in order to accommodate fresh insight .
14 As I shall seek to show , however , that culture can not be divorced from the constraints of history and of physical and spatial resources .
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