Example sentences of "[noun pl] can [verb] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 FISHING fans can find out about the benefits of restocking rivers at a public meeting tomorrow .
2 The boot is big , the kids can see out of the windows and the heat/vent/demisting is brilliant , as are the sound system and cruise control .
3 Goods sold in the shops can lead out from the immediate locality to the mills , workshops and factories of the industrial revolution , and indeed Empire produced goods will introduce a world horizon .
4 But be careful , Write-Protect labels can come off inside the drive an cause a real mess !
5 The oil companies can come through with the fuel , but it 'll cost more .
6 Even so , considerable errors can build up over the period of ten or more years that elapses between one Census date and the time when the finalized results of the next Census can be used .
7 Bristleworms of all sizes should always be handled with forceps ; those fluffy white spines can break off in the fishkeeper 's skin .
8 The rent officer is also responsible for monitoring the rents which voluntary hostels can claim back in the form of housing benefits , and there are fears that the limits for hostels will be set at too low a level creating difficulties for both residents and the hostel management .
9 These feelings can build up into the next repeat of the same interchange .
10 What 's more , there will be three of them , so your club 's second and third teams can get in on the act as well .
11 We hope the 4 cylinder speedsters can keep up with the pace .
12 However , in a feedback circuit , if the 1kHz gain is set low , say 30 , or if the ‘ open loop gain ’ of the circuit is limited ( as opposed to very high ) , inaccuracies can creep in beyond the usual tolerances , and special consideration may then be necessary .
13 After them , things can go on in the normal hopeless way .
14 This last month , the Bavarians have been going through the painful experience of learning that , where an historic collection is concerned , it is the whole which is greater than the parts , and no saving of individual items can make up for the erosion of that whole .
15 From the behavioural point of view , the principal male characteristic is sadistic sexual egoism , since is it clear that only the male who is capable of driving off his rivals can hold on to the females of the breeding group .
16 He adds : ‘ People who get carried away when describing their wares can end up in the small claims court . ’
17 Yesterday Peter Shovlin , of course designers Anthony Walker associates , said there are ‘ fine details ’ which need to be resolved with the lawyers at Darlington Council before diggers can move on to the site .
18 How is it that what seem like random discharges from a part of the brain that we share with the humblest reptiles can end up as the elaborate , coherent , cognitive activity we know as dreaming ?
19 In extreme cases , trainees can hand over to the minder where they feel unable to cope .
20 The wool room , which is now converted for serving teas , has entrance from the house , and patrons can sit out on the gallery .
21 There could be more awareness of the ways in which women with children can get out of the home to meet socially or take up outside employment , and more facilities to increase those opportunities .
22 Children can get out in the open to see for themselves .
23 But if you put something like a wall with a slit in it in the way of the particle , the particle paths can spread out beyond the slit .
24 Thus collectors can get back to the sound of the original master-tape far more closely than would be possible with any 1955 disc , let alone a forgery of one .
25 Later on , interest centred on the revision of the terms on which schemes can contract out of the State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme and the profession commented on the Government Actuary 's proposals for the rebate in National Insurance contributions from 1993 onwards .
26 There is no general evidence as yet to link second home ownership with house price increases ( de Vane 1975 ) , but in local instances this has undoubtedly happened on a property-for-property basis , and it is easy to be convinced that dire housing consequences can come about for the ‘ traditional ’ rural population .
27 Users of telecottages are given the key and people can use them at any time , which means that women can come in during the evening , early in the morning or whatever . ’
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