Example sentences of "one could [verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Also known as Fachen , Fachin , or the Diereach , this evil monster from Scotland is so ugly that simply looking upon one could result in death from heart failure .
2 The saddlery is equipped with an alarm but owner Bill Perratt said the raid was over so quickly no one could react in time to catch the culprits .
3 One could sit in front of the fire , but there the lighting was difficult and it was too scorchingly hot . )
4 One could register for NVQ studies at 18 , but take the examinations at 80 .
5 It was the least one could do in gratitude for so many years of loyal friendship , and the only basis on which that friendship could continue .
6 Was it , wondered Robert , something one could do by post ?
7 Smart , one could go to town or anywhere in it .
8 There were those who might doubt the beneficial character of revived kingship ; but no one could quarrel with Map 's view that Louis was responsible for a major change of direction in the history of France .
9 It seemed unlikely that the undertaker had troubled sufficiently about those who survived him to take such precautions , but no one could speak with confidence of what had passed through the mind of this man whose deepest preoccupations seemed to be represented by a few scored lines in a medical book and a little bundle of poems .
10 No one could convert to Christianity in Sri Lanka without a complete break from their family and culture .
11 No one could predict with certainty whether or not the King would grant a dissolution in such circumstances , but his inclination was to ensure that the Labour government be given every privilege that previous governments had enjoyed .
12 It might be thought that one could look at lung cancer death rates among groups of people ( e.g. Mormons , Seventh Day Adventists ) who never smoke .
13 And the more one knew , the more control one could wield over circumstance .
14 There were limits o what one could say about milk yields and the EEC .
15 The normal association of prose with the lower elements — no one could say in prose ‘ I am fre and air ; my other elements/I give to baser life ’ ( Antony and Cleopatra , V.ii.289f. ) — is revealed most amusingly in the case of Bottom .
16 Although she had become a native of the boats , and pitied the tideless and ratless life of the Chelsea inhabitants , she respected the water and knew that one could die within sight of the Embankment .
17 It was impossible to know the truth about Timothy Gedge , why he was as he was ; no one could know with certainty .
18 A Hebridean island — it does sound like a place where one could work in peace , and they have actually called it an ‘ ivory tower ’ .
19 His host had mentioned three daughters , but they were definitely not the sort of girls one could tumble into bed and then forget .
20 As Sister Cecilia was to say to her , one could live without reading , writing , or arithmetic , sewing , singing or geography ; and yes — there would be a twinkle in her eye — with some , even without the good God ; but one could n't live without food and without those who knew how to make it appetising to the tongue .
21 I wondered how long one could live without food or water ?
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