Example sentences of "[pron] could also [verb] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Not only were they more cheaply remunerated — at the church 's expense , mainly — and far more experienced in the business and technicalities of administration and negotiation , but their clerical status gave them a weight which most laymen could only acquire by aristocratic connections or by ennoblement ; lay chancellors , to be of any consequence , needed political and dynastic links , which could also spell danger for the king .
2 You could also hear music at home on a wind-up gramophone with ten- or twelve-inch 78 r.p.m. bakelite records .
3 You could also keep traack of who was in whoose team … & all transfers could be done via you .
4 In polluted regions of the Northern Hemisphere , seasonal increases in ozone concentration have been observed ; such changes could arise from photochemical reactions , but they could also involve transport from the ozone-rich stratosphere .
5 Beveridge , however , studied the German experiment more closely during the next year and concluded that the contributory insurance principle could not only reduce costs ; it could also eliminate reliance on means tests . ’
6 But it is also beginning to realise that , unless it is careful , it could also face opposition from more unexpected quarters .
7 It could also make process of up-dating too demanding to sustain .
8 It could also throw light on the process by which they trap carbon dioxide in the atmosphere .
9 Similarly , the value of a reinvestigation could be weakened if , instead of co-operating , the suspect leaves his explanation for the trial , when not only can it not be investigated but when it could also cast doubt on the value of any re-investigation that has taken place .
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