Example sentences of "can [verb] the whole " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Furthermore , a digital graph plotter can reproduce the whole visual image on paper , with pinpoint accuracy , in a minute or two . |
2 | A good general practitioner keeps an eye on the health of his elderly patients , knows the score , and can conduct the whole orchestra of welfare on their behalf when they need it . |
3 | BP Solar is developing a technology based on an alternative semiconductor that can absorb the whole solar spectrum in about one-thousandth of a millimetre of material . |
4 | This can cover the whole cost of draught-proofing , getting your loft insulated , having your pipes and tanks lagged , and possibly wall insulation and secondary glazing . |
5 | Steps to improve energy efficiency can affect the whole range of energy systems in industry , transport , the home , commerce and the public sector . |
6 | If all this can happen to a person who 's lost a job , you can see how it can affect the whole family . |
7 | The easy option is to visit a kite shop , send for a mail order list or attend a kite meeting where there 's a sales stand so that you can buy the whole outfit — handle , line and a ready-to-fly kite with , or perhaps without , a tail . |
8 | NEIL PROSSER , co-owner of four Chipie shops , likes the options the label offers : ‘ You can buy the whole look or just a T-shirt . ’ |
9 | When planning screens make sure that all areas will still be readily accessible , not only so you can enjoy the whole garden but also to make planting and maintenance easier . |
10 | As we have seen , Gandhi recognizes that no single religion can embody the whole truth , and that all particular religions contain errors since they are human constructs or formulations , but does it follow necessarily that when he speaks of Religion underlying all human constructs , or at the heart of all religions , he is referring to an ‘ essence ’ of an ‘ entity ’ or a ‘ primordial form ’ of religion after the fashion of Schleiermacher ? |
11 | ‘ But Ray is quality through and through and is the sort of player who can give the whole Villa team a real lift . |
12 | A word can carry the whole meaning of a question e.g. " opportunist " , " inevitable " , " substantial " , " decisive " , " influence " , " comprehensive " etc . |
13 | To perceive that fiction can describe a known and shared experience — to accept , in effect , the chief claim of realism — is to perceive that , in the end , no single or simple doctrine , whether Marxist , Christian or other , can do the whole job . |
14 | whereas people they reckon that they can do it , they can do the whole lot for eighteen hundred |
15 | Yes , we can bring the whole show — cast , props , music , the lot . |
16 | By and large all the previous Guitarist Show exhibitors are still there but the remit of the event has been broadened to incorporate recording , hi-tech , drums and relevant musicians ' services ( including the Performing Right Society and the MU ) , so now you can bring the whole band along to visit . |
17 | Such an approach can bring the whole notion of assessment into disrepute , as well as misunderstand particular individuals . |
18 | You can keep the whole thing very neat by using 5 cm ( 2 in ) wide cardboard strips cut to the height of the walls . |
19 | You can use the whole thing with a mouse ( is there anything you ca n't use a mouse with these days ? ) , but we found that the I-beam cursor was anything but stable with a mouse . |
20 | We can use the whole sample but just get those four erm four test statistics okay . |
21 | And you can spend the whole day without a bite . |
22 | they can drain the whole system on the site so |
23 | More or less any adult can provide the whole curriculum single-handed after being trained to control a class and given an occasional top-up day of in-service training . |
24 | But , first , you can see the whole stage — and even today houses are being built with seats that have a view of only half the stage ! — and second , it is acoustically marvellous for the audience and the conductor ; for opera and for concerts , especially choral concerts . |
25 | We can see the whole world here , the Empire , that 's the same thing as the whole world , and you 'll profit by it . |
26 | Apart from these exceptions the subject can see the whole computerised record . |
27 | I can see the whole scene already and maybe you 'll cry a little … ’ |
28 | Managers , like service officers , it is believed , can see the whole ‘ terrain ’ and have to take the decisions , unpopular as they may be , so that the enterprise can survive . |
29 | Although I can see the whole thing unrolling in my mind 's eye like a silent film , I ca n't really be precise about where everyone was and that sort of thing . ’ |
30 | As at Knossos and Mallia , the temple grew up symbiotically with its adjacent town , but at Zakro we can see the whole urban structure . |