Example sentences of "[adj] [pers pn] can [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 On this you can balance extractive crops with fertility-building leys , grazing with cutting , and thereby keep the individual fields in balance with the overall potential of the land .
2 From this we can determine current yields .
3 like to eat , you know , there 's not much you can catch coarse fishing that you can eat anyway erm but most people who go sea fishing do it to eat what they catch .
4 Barton is part of a regional development area and as such it can offer new companies a wide range of financial incentives .
5 The advantage of budgeting is that not only do you know exactly where you stand — or perhaps stagger ? — today , but that you can make sensible judgements about , for , how much more saving you can undertake , or whether you can afford to increase your borrowing still further .
6 If they are very ill they can claim other benefits , such as attendance allowance .
7 Announcing an extra 50,000 places on Government training schemes she promised to ‘ do all I can to help unemployed people get back to work ’ .
8 We would ask everyone to be on the look out for potential student teachers and to do all you can to encourage prospective candidates .
9 " We should always do all we can to improve local facilities and the ease of getting to them on foot or by bicycle , " said Sir George Young , Minister of Housing and Planning .
10 The forum would now use the information to ‘ press for changes in legislation to enable more money and resources to be directed at the problem , while at the same time doing all we can to enable local people to find local solutions ’ .
11 Teachers are asked to do all they can to encourage new members and old ones to re-join .
12 ENGINEERING experts are confident they can replace vital bolts in Teesside 's famous Transporter Bridge .
13 But the electronics and computer systems dealer is currently reorganising the structure of its business to make sure it can address changing demands in its markets .
14 There is increasingly a feeling that the larger the firm the better it can withstand recessionary periods and the more effectively it can compete with other firms ; and these two sentiments may succeed each other as , say , a regional grouping for mutual protection develops into a nationwide conglomerate for enhanced profits .
15 Additionally , if mammalian tissues are used intact they can exhibit anisotropic solute diffusion — ie different in different directions .
16 While all areas of the country have lost employment as a result of the need for fewer workers , rural areas have gained in that they can accommodate new floorspace .
17 First we can offer direct support to businesses in the form of loans , loan guarantees or grants , depending on the needs of the firms .
18 It was only in the late eighteenth century that spelling became standardised in a way that we would recognise today , and as late as 1900 you can read variant words that surprise us rather — shew for show , for example .
19 It appears as a dim blur with low magnification , but with × 20 I can see individual stars in it .
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