Example sentences of "could [verb] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | If Dad is a war movie buff you could treat him to the classic Bridge Over The River Kwai . |
2 | Instead of giving your mum chocolates ( or cake as they did in those days ) , you could treat her to a special melon basket , which can be prepared the day before . |
3 | Well , in some countries this might be the only opportunity learners get to hear extensive chunks of the language , so you could treat it as a " language bath " session and concentrate on helping your learners come away with a general idea of the content . |
4 | If the deceased was prone to depression , the court could treat it as an example of the egg shell skull rule . |
5 | I 'm not sure sure how we could build it into the criteria of But it 's it 's a point which would obviously have to be borne in mind in terms of the str you know , the planning process . |
6 | Neglect of them could throw him into a searing rage ; as when he discovered that a rest camp for troops out of the line had been placed within sound of the guns . |
7 | but even then we could have consignment stock here in effect cos they 're only forty minutes away , we could throw 'em in the back of the car and have 'em delivered . |
8 | ‘ So gummy that you could throw it against a wall and it would stick , ’ It was known as ska , blue beat or rocksteady , and collectively as reggae . |
9 | I do n't like to blow my own trumpet but My Better Half could eat it to a band playing . |
10 | The treatment can offset some effects of menopause , including brittle bone disease — osteoporosis — but the study reveals that the wrong kind of HRT could expose them to the risk of womb cancer . |
11 | All the Brownies agreed , and so Beegee promised to see what she could do about getting old-fashioned uniforms or photographs of them so that mothers could make them in the style of earlier days . |
12 | I saw a couple of people with TV cameras ; Tony had persuaded some cameramen to film the Benefit for free so he could make it into a video afterwards . |
13 | Or you could make it into a picture for a baby or toddler to hang on their bedroom wall . |
14 | It would only take a couple of houses to be knocked down and they could make it into a dual carriage way . |
15 | Or I could make it into a puppet . |
16 | She was Labour , she said , but was n't sure she could make it to the polls . |
17 | ‘ You could make it to the end now , and I 'll tell old Sam you 've done a length . ’ |
18 | With fifteen laps to go , the race was his : if he could make it to the end . |
19 | She sincerely hoped that she could make it to the track before any car came because she knew exactly what a mess she looked . |
20 | Leonora watched him go with mixed feelings , not really sure she could make it to the bathroom alone , despite her fine words . |
21 | If we could make it through the torrent to the bend ahead … |
22 | ‘ That was when I knew he could make it in the bigtime , ’ he says . |
23 | That you could make it in the movies with no boobs to speak of was , until recently , an alien notion . |
24 | If he sets his mind to it he could make it in the cross-channel game , ’ says Scottish goal scoring ace Derek Cook , who himself will pose a considerable threat to Ards . |
25 | Depopulation from plague was a very real factor in the long term , and while it might not destroy a village immediately , it could weaken it as a social and economic unit . |
26 | I reckoned I could blackmail him into a job . |
27 | Indeed it did , to anybody who remembered or could visual-ise it as a busy dock . |
28 | At my mother 's I could dry it in the garden . |
29 | a derivative of it , which gave you the same high that ecstasy does and er , and if you did n't it from the doctor you could buy it on the street . |
30 | You could buy it in a penny packet bloody great |