Example sentences of "can [pron] [vb infin] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 What MPG range can I expect from the standard Land Rover V8 ?
2 No longer can I bear with the ruined god , betrayed and beaten by his own magic .
3 Can I go through the front door like that ?
4 Can I go in the rolling mills ?
5 BELVILLE : What can I do with the little baggage , Mrs. Jervis ?
6 So what guidance can I give for the actual writing of the crime short story ?
7 But can I refer to the honourable member for Truro er again he talked about P R , he thought that it would somehow , if we move that the there for this election it would save some time .
8 How can I keep within the normal range when this sort of thing happens ?
9 Can I say to the honourable gentleman , why does n't he give encouragement to Britain 's performance in the financial services sector ?
10 Can I ask over the last six seven years what local companies have funded the playhouse and to what level ? and how many of actually withdrawn and the reasons why they actually withdrawn ?
11 Or how can I look after the poor things ?
12 How many jockeys , trainers and horses can you spot in the next 30 seconds .
13 How many jockeys , trainers and horses can you spot in the next forty seconds ?
14 How can you survive without the political levy ?
15 Can you turn to the second chapter of Nehemiah for a glimpse of the answer .
16 Can you recall in the past years the keepers ever receiving beer or whisky allowance .
17 Can she measure in the appropriate units ?
18 Before taking this as a general licence for an active industrial policy to manage change , governments must ask why the market is not doing a better job , and whether intervention can itself improve on the existing situation .
19 Nor can we think of the Christian God as three persons in the way that we normally consider them to be , or we would surely have to conclude that it was a religion committed to polytheism .
20 What can we make of the corporatist perspective on British politics , and just how stable is the pattern of politics which is suggested by those who point to close collaborative arrangements between particular interests and the state in pursuit of ever more state intervention ?
21 Although all modem workers ' movements have developed strategies comprising both labour market and political components how can we explain within the European context the greater emphasis upon the achievement of radical change in the structure of society by French and Italian unions , whose thrust ( certainly up to the late 1960s ) has been at least as much ideological and political as industrial , in comparison with West German or British unions ?
22 It calls for the qualities of a fighter , for only with those qualities can we win through the constant traps and barriers laid by the forces that would block our path and drag us down .
23 How can we escape from the emotional addictions we carry in ourselves ?
24 ‘ Not until we fully understand people 's attitudes and experience can we put through the appropriate legislation , ’ says a spokesman .
25 What , then , can one make of the various explanations for the growth of government' ?
26 Only from roughly the middle of the tenth/sixteenth century-perhaps coincidentally with the building of two other medreses which were to form part of the altmisli class , namely that attached to the mosque built by Suleyman for his son , Sehzade Mehmed ( the Sehzade medrese , completed in 954/1547 ) , and that built by the same sultan for his father , Selim I , apparently around 955/1548 — can one discern in the biographical sources the existence of a class of medreses , comprising these and others , one rank higher than the Sahn and normally carrying a salary of 60 akce , teaching in one of which seems to have been a generally recognized prerequisite for the holding of the highest learned offices .
27 What instrumental techniques can not do is evaluate the sensory attributes of an odour , in particular its acceptability , nor can they compete with the human nose as far as sensitivity to most odours is concerned .
28 And how can they know about the dreadful events surrounding Burghgesh 's death ? ’
29 What succour or comfort can he offer to the unemployed in my constituency of Knowsley , South , where 65 jobless now chase every vacancy advertised in the jobcentres ?
30 in the region of twenty months and two years , erm , in those circumstances my Lord er the issue must arise in the interim er is er able er to re-claim money for the central fund , these are monies that are as your Lordship knows under article ten , payable forthwith on demand and in the interim can it rely on the statutory effect of section fourteen of the act
  Next page