Example sentences of "[adv] that [pron] can [adv] [be] " in BNC.

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1 PageMaker has a very clever habit of remembering all the changes that have been made to a document so that they can either be Undone or Reverted to .
2 In many cases , however , multimedia applications have to convert analogue sources of information such as sound , photographic images and video , into their digital counterparts so that they can then be manipulated within that single information environment .
3 Either the physical limits of the item are wide , so that the design and production of the mating parts become difficult and expensive , or they are narrow so that they can only be produced by expensive processes .
4 Either the physical limits of the item are wide , so that the design and production of the mating parts become difficult and expensive , or they are narrow so that they can only be produced by expensive processes .
5 For the first time ever film has become something real for me , and that 's why I go to see it , I want to get right inside it , so that I can really be alive . ’
6 With any excavating job you can avoid creating a blot on the landscape for months after by slicing the turf off in strips , so that it can later be relaid .
7 The tape containing the raw material collected will be deposited at the ESRC Data Archive at the University of Essex and will be designed so that it can easily be analysed in conjunction with Census Small Areas Statistics .
8 How does new learned information become ‘ represented ’ in the brain in the form of new patterns of connections between cells so that it can subsequently be retrieved and modify future behaviour ?
9 The way to get into the editor 's heart is to lay it out so that it can actually be read .
10 The matrix is designed to be flexible and adaptable so that it can readily be adjusted to respond to needs identified by users .
11 There was , of course , a diversity of tenures — so much so that it can never be assumed that the customs of any two manors were identical , or even similar , unless perhaps they formed part of the same feudal honour , for example the barony of Lewes in Sussex , which had evolved a set of common customs .
12 But dumb animals are incapable of considering themselves in this light ; which is not to imply that human beings always do , only that they can normally be expected to if required .
13 It also means that if difference in its sense of non-identity sets up the possibility of history , then difference in its sense of delay means also that it can never be finally concluded , for such deferral will always inhibit closure .
14 I know too that you can never be with me here and for that reason I have taken a decision .
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