Example sentences of "can [be] make for the " in BNC.

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1 In this way provision can be made for the control of potential odours by requiring certain odour abatement equipment to be installed .
2 Some place must be found for the principle of self-determination as a basis for altering international boundaries and the controlled and limited use of force in the service of this principle , and , in order to establish the boundaries of such legitimate force , it will be necessary to establish rules to which appeal can be made for the settlement of territorial disputes by international courts as an essential precondition of the legitimate resort to force .
3 The move up to verse can be made for the exit of a person from a lower but also for the entrance of one from a higher rank .
4 Having found out how much money the client has to spend , the producer must study the creative team 's script and storyboard and work out whether it can be made for the money available .
5 Only when the agency is satisfied that they have a film which can be made for the money and will be allowed on air should it be shown to the client .
6 A strong case can be made for the antibodies being consequential to neurological disease , and there is no correlation between the presence of these antibodies and in vitro indices of inherent toxicity of sera in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome .
7 Even amongst those organisms with well-coordinated nervous systems , a good case can be made for the dominance of beetles over mammals .
8 Special arrangements can be made for the collection of refuse from elderly and disabled people ; and for the disposal of clinical waste and hazardous waste .
9 I hope that sufficient progress can be made for the Secretary-General to convene an international meeting soon , as endorsed by a number of Security Council resolutions .
10 In this small community the adjustments can be made for the handicapping conditions of the persons involved .
11 On the successful completion of all module tests and the final theoretical examination , application can be made for the practical part of the examination .
12 The building should be depreciated a stronger case can be made for the use of the straight line method than the reducing balance method .
13 A perfectly rational case can be made for the merchant to be carefully and conspicuously established as the innocent and undeserving victim of a conspiracy between his wife and the monk .
14 Faced with these facts the semanticist must either hold that some is ambiguous between the readings " some and not all " , and " some and perhaps all " , or allow a pragmatic account of the different interpretations ( Parallel arguments can be made for the word all , and indeed most of the lexical items in a language . )
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