Example sentences of "that we can [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 When we are told there is a shortage of floppy disks , what they ought to be doing is sending out working printing saving and using versions of their programs that we can load 10–20 times then said software will commit Hari Kari .
2 Joint research projects with the universities offer the potential for cost-savings , provided that we can offer good facilities here , and that the scientific content of the research is of a very high standard .
3 The DTI continues to receive the support of a dedicated team providing oil reservoir services and has recently agreed that we can offer these skills to the oil industry ; expansion of our home market is now a key target .
4 I think we need to plan our projects so that we can galvanize voluntary efforts as much as possible , particularly in small projects er when they come up in future .
5 We assume , in both the individual and the political cases , that we can recognize other people 's acts as expressing a conception of fairness or justice or decency even when we do not endorse that conception ourselves .
6 We 're so brainwashed into seeing the world as random and meaningless that we can ignore countless messages from our Higher Self every day .
7 This means that we can ignore one row of A ; we exemplify this below .
8 dir : I 'm sorry , but we have to convince the medical research establishment that we can deliver high quality work not these small scale , unquantifiable studies of yours .
9 Now we have to be careful with the word ‘ redemptive ’ because in a final way only Christ 's sufferings can be deemed truly redemptive ; but I feel that we can make guarded use of the term .
10 For example , we have found that we can make good businesses by selling services that we developed for use in our own company .
11 The behaviourists insist that we can observe two things : first , what an animal does , and second , its previous environmental history .
12 As to Broughton moor , we shall do all that we can to take environmental considerations into account .
13 With r = 0 , Equation ( 2.7.1.5 ) becomes unc Hence if we choose co to make k1 zero , it will contain no contribution from x1 , and , as r increases sufficiently to a value s , ( 2.7.1.5 ) will tend to unc The condition unc means that we can express one element of co in terms of the remaining n — 1 .
14 Notice also that we can express any class of asset as a proportion of total assets or liabilities and remember too that in section 1.1.5 we said that these ratios are arrived at as a matter of deliberate choice and are assumed to represent portfolio equilibrium .
15 I was just going to make a quick comment if I may on Oxfam , because I noticed that they 're down for the street collections and for the flag day , now next year 's their fiftieth anniversary , so I think it 's quite appropriate next year , but I do , my own view is , that we will get , we ought to get one comprehensive list of all these organisations , for both the street collections and the flag days , with an indication in the column of whether it 's flag day they 've gone for or a street collection , so that we can identify that sort of situation .
16 Turning to the third category , of strokes that serve to separate clearly a single note from a group of slurred notes that either precede or follow , we could call them ‘ separation strokes ’ We find strokes in such patterns as shown in ex.3a so overwhelmingly , that we can identify sporadic dots as shrunken strokes .
17 We must also ensure that we can identify local variations from the national pattern ’ .
18 We hope the exercise will provide the Council a clear context and direction for its work ; one that we can give whole-hearted support .
19 This is a completely new way of funding the universities , and although we think at Birmingham that we can give good value for money and provide a good education at a fair price , this is new territory for us and there could be some surprises on the way .
20 I think if we do that we might both discover that we can give each other a great deal of pleasure . ’
21 We also have to run three miles in full kit ( forty-four pounds including rifle and helmet ) in thirty-three minutes ; and demonstrate that we can give first aid , among other tests .
22 It is only by relating outside ourselves to God that we can avoid this trap .
23 In the discourse of the lyric poem it is unlikely that we can ascribe indexical meaning to symbolic elements of deictic terms .
24 Erm we feel quite confident that we can reach these targets .
25 If the Minister checks ’ Erskine May ’ , which I can gladly provide for him , I believe that we can reach common ground on this if there is the will to do so .
26 Research has proved that we can eat more carbohydrate calories than fat calories and still lose weight !
27 by no means all the battles have yet been won , but already we expect that we can break new ground if we really try hard enough ; we expect to seen our ambitions fulfilled if we have the talent and application to meet our goals .
28 … ‘ This is I think one of the reasons that we can tolerate some non-compliance because some of the consent conditions are a bit too strict . ’
29 However , both must be allowed to take on negative values , so that we can represent negative numbers and normalized numbers with absolute value less than 1 /b .
30 Peirce 's first philosophy requires that we can formulate substantive conceptions of truth and reference without recourse to the special sciences .
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