Example sentences of "could [vb infin] them [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Now , the reason we particularly were interested in this was that from the questionnaire we already were beginning to get back some information , and we discovered that eighty-six percent of people had seen their G P in the previous year , and maybe if we could introduce them to the age-well project at some point during that contact , we would be able to achieve something .
2 Zoshchenko could caricature them in the 1920s , but by the 1930s it became too dangerous to ridicule what had solidified into a standardized bureaucratic mode of oppression .
3 Now they will be scared rigid of stepping up and saying anything which could land them on the same mat upon which Lamb was so unfairly punished at Lord 's yesterday .
4 But I could do them in the smaller size . ’
5 Steven decided that if he could n't come up with a definitive artistic statement to impress the grown-ups , then at least he could impress them with the definitive bank statement .
6 Perhaps if you wish to add questions , it might be helpful if you could circulate them amongst the 4 of us before the 26th .
7 The family had put out the items including tea services and Georgian candlesticks so house guests could admire them over the New Years holiday .
8 By the time Roger had recorded from sixteen birds , he told me he thought he could detect regular differences between them so large that he could assign them to the two groups even without being given the code .
9 They were fairly clumsy devices and only offered security from one side : anyone could unlock them from the other side .
10 So you could wear them under the heavy o oil skin or whatever else they wore on top , and it looked a very comfortable garment , apart from the waterproof .
11 My wife asked me to dismantle an island breakfast bar , and retain the units so we could incorporate them into the existing kitchen later .
12 The objective of the Lausanne conference should be to encourage Kenya and its allies to emulate the conditions pertaining in the Kruger and Hwange national parks , where culling has become a necessity born out of successful conservation , rather than to encourage policies which could turn them into the run-down disaster zones Mr Leakey described .
  Next page