Example sentences of "[noun] that such [noun] can " in BNC.

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1 The demonstration that such tasks can involve controlled processes does not mean that they always do , even tasks at the operational level may be performed as controlled processes , for example , when starting to drive an unusual vehicle .
2 It is in our primary schools that such potential can be tended or crushed .
3 The positive side of the local sign theory is an expression of the faith that such abilities can be explained by reference to processes ( of inference from observed correlations , and so on ) which are themselves conscious .
4 It may be the case that such schemes can not operate unless some people make a substantial sacrifice for them .
5 Applied to the practices emerging in the period 1985–9 , this framework yielded a variety of ways in which TTT can help both children and teachers , and a diversity of forms that such collaborations can take .
6 We saw in our discussion of bureaucracy that such developments can lead to a more efficient and effective organisation .
7 With the bulk of surgical patients consisting of urgent conditions , from cancers to vascular disease , Richard Wood , Professor of Surgery , has told Dr Grant that such surgery can not be halted .
8 One of the problems is that this last type of research tends to be attractive to local authorities and central government departments who face pressing problems , and there is a danger that such studies can become too influential on policy when little else is available .
9 And although there are some MPs who think Clarke should go now to prevent any worse gaffes , it is only on past events rather than future possibilities that such decisions can be made .
10 It is a matter of common wisdom that such newspapers can not be trusted .
11 Some methods avoid native language explanations altogether on the grounds that such explanations can only be abstract and confusing to the learner , and that they make him spend his time not so much in learning the language but rather in learning about the language ( Mackey 1965 p 240 ) .
12 In the Gravelle and Katz model then , there is scope for a potential improvement in performance to be induced by constraints on the firm , despite the fact that such constraints can lead to other distortions .
13 As Gombrich points out : ‘ the experience of the underlying constancies in a person 's face which is so strong as to survive all the transformations of mood and age and even to leap across generations , conflicts with the strange fact that such recognition can be inhibited with comparative ease by what may be called the mask ’ .
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