Example sentences of "able to deal [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Workers are expected to be able to deal with a range of tasks and managers to be able to respond to immediate changes in demand . |
2 | It is typical of how an older horseman who had in his possession most of the ancient secrets , was able to deal with a situation that had baffled a younger man . |
3 | Invest in training for the systems manager who will then be able to deal with a lot of problems that arise . |
4 | These were articulate people , perhaps better able to deal with the press and media than some other families who have found themselves in the same position . |
5 | Erm there 's been a reduction er , in the er , staff er because er er people have moved on and er , I take Sue 's point about er if it were n't for the fact that erm they 'd got fully e e experienced staff who 've been there some time , they have n't , not used to this churning over o of , and therefore , that has paid off in er in er in erm so far as being able to deal with the problems that have arisen and er , you 'll see further on er , addition profiles of the work that 's been done with er in this area over the town . |
6 | If this happens , you should speak to your line manager , who may be able to deal with the problem , or advise what you should do . |
7 | I am sure that the NRA considers that it will be able to deal with the problem with the resources that it has . |
8 | They were able to deal with the problem because they discovered a stream running through an eighteenth-century tunnel next door . |
9 | The sense of comic opera or mini tragedy was reinforced by the fact that at the March meeting the Shetland Islands Council received a letter from the Scottish Office , indicating that as ministers would not be able to deal with the issue ‘ for quite some considerable time ’ , could not the Shetland Islands Council sort out the matter ? |
10 | I regret not being able to deal with the subject of community care policy as extensively as its importance deserves , although there is a general discussion in Chapter 3 . |
11 | The problem , in short , was to find a system where the landowner could continue to create all the beneficial interests he wished in favour of members of the family , and , at the same time , would be able to deal with the land , by sale , long lease , or mortgage , as if he were a sole owner . |
12 | ‘ If OPEC is having so much trouble coming up with this agreement , it 's a bad sign for how they will be able to deal with the start-up of Iraq , ’ the analyst added . |
13 | If we can get some action on the ground to tackle rights of way issues , we 'll be able to deal with the kinds of conflicts we 've seen in the past decade . |
14 | A Minority Government will hardly be able to deal with the situation , and it is quite possible that Your Majesty might be asked to approve of a National Government . |
15 | Yet it is the children themselves who often seem better able to deal with the situation . |
16 | And she might have been able to deal with the situation — might , indeed , have been able to suppress and finally bury such an errant emotion — if it were n't for her present situation . |
17 | ‘ This means that we have been able to deal with the cash position , which earlier in the year had reached crisis proportions . |
18 | He had never been able to deal with the outside . |
19 | She has communication difficulties and is unlikely to be able to deal with the matter herself . |
20 | Young children appear to acquire a " grammar " of story comparatively early and are able to deal with the sequencing with reasonable success — i.e. the initial events are sequenced initially in the text and so on . |
21 | However , a sufficiently general language would have all the disadvantages of not being able to deal with the idiosyncrasies of a particular computer , with none of the advantages of a high-level language . |
22 | At the same time , the rate at which information is processed by the brain increases dramatically , making us better able to deal with an emergency . |