Example sentences of "[conj] can [verb] from the " in BNC.
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1 | For those who grow their own tomatoes or can buy from the market when the fruit is cheap , here it is : |
2 | Lenin contrasted two types of development that can result from the penetration of capitalism in agriculture : the Kulak or American path and the Junker path . |
3 | Margaret of Carlisle , 47 , was widowed two years ago and knew at first hand the financial problems that can arise from the sudden death of a loved one and the trauma of finding that her partner was inadequately insured . |
4 | They are , likewise , employed to limit the losses in efficiency that can arise from the presence of elements of monopoly . |
5 | This is not so much for reasons of hygiene , it should be added , but rather from fear of the pollution that can come from the demons of the dead , who are usually thought to harbour hostile feelings towards the living . |
6 | because there may be initiatives that can come from the factories er which would bring the thing alive also for local |
7 | As they get older they tend to have very thin skin and can bruise from the slightest injury . |
8 | Similarly , an intruder immediately knows that the area is occupied , and can tell from the freshness of the scent how recently the owner has been there . |
9 | If the national curriculum were about bringing difference Into the open instead of separating the desirable from the undesirable and suppressing the latter , we might see more people who are confident in their identity and can integrate from the basis of knowledge and strength rather than one of weakness . |
10 | The optimality theory states that an increase in a is good , as the subjects can always ignore the increased probability of lower prices ( as they should not be selling at those low prices anyhow ) and can profit from the increased probability of higher prices . |