Example sentences of "could [be] [verb] through the " in BNC.

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1 This result could be achieved through the application of similar reasoning to that adopted by the Privy council in NZ Shipping Co Ltd v AM Satterthwaite Co Ltd [ 1975 ] AC 154 .
2 Erm others have have suggested that it could be handled through the existing .
3 Gill and Jackson had the ideal opportunity to demonstrate how the phenomenon of identity confusion could be understood through the process of racial discrimination in society , a path whereby children of minority groups tend to internalise the values of the dominant society , and internalise derogatory values about themselves .
4 The route to quantification , he urged , could be secured through the notion of the variable ; a format that could be applied not simply to properties which were self-evidently quantitative , such as money , but also to qualitative materials .
5 ‘ This means that up to 50pc of the total running costs could be funded through the European Regional Development Fund , ’ Dr Evans writes .
6 But many more could be slipping through the net .
7 As the trial was a comparison of two systems of care the prompted care group subjects could be referred through the system to hospital outpatients , while the hospital clinic group patients could consult their general practitioner for diabetes related reasons .
8 The bomb-bursts could be seen through the huge pall of smoke and dust that hung over the city .
9 The success of this liaison could be seen through the arranging of seventeen day schools and six residential WETUC weekend schools .
10 A cream blouse and skirt could be seen through the window .
11 Endill fitted special wheels so the catapult base could be pushed through the door on its side .
12 The Grade V test was , therefore , taken by a number of students who had no particular interest in the theory of music , but who could be pushed through the test provided that they could learn the requirements and carry them out without too much in the way of understanding .
13 The exercise was designed to make a student stand in front of class , sing his song and force each syllable out in an elongated manner so that it had a beginning and an end ; this , Landau explained , ought to enable the student to go into neutral , physically and mentally , so that tensions could be released and what was happening inside could be heard through the voice changes .
14 The trolley masts were of the Brecknell , Munro B/l type , but a late version which could be turned through the full circle .
15 ‘ B/2 ’ trolley masts with sloping caps which could be turned through the full circle .
16 The mast was of the newly designed B.T-H ‘ B.2 ’ design with a sloping cap ; its principal advantage was that it could be turned through the full circle without damaging the internal cable .
17 Any extra equipment or special materials he required could be obtained through the agency of the headquarters ' staff .
18 Secondly , he suggested that the values of liberty and solidarity could be integrated through the promotion of associational and interest groups .
19 By the Saturday afternoon it could be watched through the driving rain from Fowey .
20 Additional short workshops and courses could be negotiated through the District Community Care Training Fora .
21 A letter from John Beale to Samuel Hartlib in the late 1650s shows how the integration could be effected through the hope of a restored dominion over nature :
22 The costs to the service in terms of resources such as teaching aids should be relatively little , given that they are often reusable , while opportunity costs , such as time taken in learning how to teach and time in which to teach , could be recouped through the improved patient care which results from heightened awareness of current trends and developments .
23 ( c ) it was argued that any potential conflicts could be circumvented through the creation of ‘ Chinese walls ’ within firms ;
24 Steele 's starting point was that slaves as much as all other men were subject to the law of human behaviour which said that conduct could be modified through the deployment of rewards and punishments ; the point of his experiment was to offer rewards to his slaves for defined tasks when in the past they had primarily experienced punishment .
25 Some EC countries had argued that if intra-marginal interventions could be financed through the EMCF then this might prevent the obligatory interventions when a currency had reached the limits of its permitted flexibility .
26 Liz , from King 's Lynn , Norfolk , said : ‘ I am just sorry that families we know could be going through the same feelings we had when our men left for the Gulf .
27 After independence , however , the interests of different factions within the Indian bourgeoisie could be articulated through the institutions of formal democracy .
28 His vehement denial that God 's favor could be earned through the sacraments , or bought by donations to an often grasping priesthood , had set up vibrations through Christendom , eventually winning him the protection of lay powers having a vested interest in a deflation of the papacy .
29 It was now four months since the twin , Judd , had been killed and , so Harry had explained , Mr Harvey had felt it his duty to find out whether , now his son was dead , the family title would die with him or , as he now seemed to think , it could be passed through the distaff side to his daughter .
30 A revival of the near-moribund hardwood timber industry could be encouraged through the formation of co-operatives to harvest , market and make use of timber at local and regional level , the Mps said .
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