Example sentences of "each [prep] [pron] can [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 This is a device similar to a normal cassette recorder but which takes bigger tape cassettes , each of which can hold all the data and programs on your computer .
2 BRITAIN has some 2000 large reservoirs , each of which can hold more than 23 million litres of water .
3 By 1992 there will be more than 16 million miles of fibre-optic cable in place , each of which can carry 160 times more information than a copper wire .
4 It brings a fleet of seven 44-seater British Aerospace aircraft to Liverpool , each of which can carry up to six tonnes of freight .
5 You start the game with three Sopwith Camels ( the best Allied aircraft of WWI ) , each of which can absorb four hits before crashing to the ground .
6 It provides the power to drive the chain of buckets each of which can lift 7 cwt ( 356 Kg ) of silt .
7 The Liverpool-based operation has recently designed , developed and installed 25 new document scanning machines , each of which can handle up to 25,000 pools coupons an hour .
8 The relay satellites , each of which can relay 300 million bits of information , or about five million words , per second , were needed to handle the massive flow of data collected and immediately beamed down by Spacelab 's instruments .
9 A useful feature divides the working area into multiple screens , each of which can display a selected part of the main drawing at any level of magnification .
10 The screen is made up of six windows , each of which can display the current activity of one handler controlling one media unit .
11 Representation 2 can depict 9 possible states ( 8 entries in the list , each of which can take one of 9 possible values ) .
12 ‘ Your reflections , ’ Hope cried out to the apparently enraptured merchant , ‘ set off my own — as do all the most acute thoughts , scattering from the hand like seeds , each of which can take on a life of its own , and I confess that I became absorbed in those great matters of morality and commerce raised by your eloquent conversation . ’
13 Similarly , early Elvis Presley managed to link together elements connoting youth rebellion , working-class ‘ earthiness ’ and ethnic ‘ roots ’ , each of which can evoke the others , all of which were articulated together , however briefly , by a moment of popular self-assertion .
14 Consider a firm which initially has a stock of 100 machines , each of which can produce 50 units of output per time period .
15 Once we have definable categories of patients , each of which can have a defined treatment regime , it then becomes a fairly straightforward task to build up a defined treatment cost .
16 The 68360 combines a 68020-based 32-bit central processing core and a RISC-based communications controller managing four high-bandwidth serial communications channels , each of which can support up to eight major communications protocols .
17 Imagine there is a line of cells , each of which can turn blue , or white , or red .
18 The crackling of a fire , the dawn chorus of the birds , the sound of waves upon the shore ; most of these go unnoticed and yet each of them can give a great deal of pleasure if we could only learn to become aware of them .
19 There are nine genes , and each of them can take any of 19 values .
20 Suppose we have M individuals , each of whom can perform any of M tasks .
21 This is an excellent choice for the aquarium and by buying these captive bred animals each of us can contribute to the conservation of an important commercial food animal .
22 There is much that each of us can do to help ourselves — by not smoking , by eating sensibly , by taking regular exercise , and by not drinking too much .
23 There is much that each of us can do to help ourselves — by not smoking , by eating sensibly , by taking regular exercise , and by not drinking too much .
24 ‘ This is one way in which each of us can make a difference now ’
25 Each of us can help to improve the quality of the environment , and do our bit towards conserving the world 's resources .
26 P. T. Geach , Mental Acts , refers to the Cartesian idea ‘ that introspection can give the word ‘ I ’ a special sense , which each of us can learn on his own account' .
27 Each of us can have only a tiny impact on creating a kinder , finer world .
28 so each of us can hear ,
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