Example sentences of "could [verb] [adv] a [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | In the South Midlands and a few other areas where farm labourers could earn only a pittance crafts that employed mothers and daughters provided welcome extra income . |
2 | He could build up a knowledge of who he was , piece by piece . |
3 | As the band were good enough live , we could build up a ground swell of interest at a local level which then translated into national success . |
4 | If you could make up a sentence with those . |
5 | Ever wish you could make up a degree course to suit your own needs ? |
6 | She could make up a story , say she suffered temporary amnesia , or that she was knocked unconscious by thieves and all her money was gone , but she doubted she could make it sound believable . |
7 | Perhaps we could make up a party . |
8 | I could make out a couple of dozen large buildings . |
9 | Both sides could make out a case that they deserved to win and should have been awarded penalties . |
10 | But as his eyes grew accustomed to it he could make out a hand protruding from the open lounge doorway . |
11 | The Doctor followed the narrow road down through a small valley , before climbing back up towards a bare hilltop where he could make out a number of tiny wooden crosses , like a forest of lifeless bonsai trees . |
12 | I could make out a sort of close-fitting purple cap on the back of her head . |
13 | ‘ They say , ’ Eloise went on , ‘ that the value of the Russian works of art could make quite a difference to the total outcome , after taxes . |
14 | With his money and our soul we could think up a scheme to please everybody . |
15 | He still feels he could eke out a result without him . |
16 | Game and Games — you might get the impression that this is a shop where you could buy either a brace of grouse or a set of Monopoly . |
17 | If death could steal away a daughter , why not a son as well ? |
18 | However , there was some evidence that events could act over a period as long as six months or even a year , particularly in the patient series . |
19 | A successful tour is the priority — the icing on the cake would come if wife , Wendy , could hang on a week or so for the birth of their second child due a month before the end of the tour . ‘ |
20 | Soutine could speak hardly a word of French . |
21 | If you have editing facilities , you could edit together a succession of short " clips " of different people talking about the same subject . |
22 | However , some natives at this time became unreliable guides and could give away a patrol 's position . |
23 | Citing " informed Sudanese sources " the Egyptian paper Al-Sharq al-Awsat of Feb. 6 reported that 41 military officers had been arrested on Feb. 2 before they could carry out a plan to bomb the general staff headquarters during a meeting of the country 's military leaders . |
24 | Some of the men had brought ropes and small axes with them so that , while they were in the forest , they could carry back a load of firewood rather than returning empty-handed if they did n't get the boar . |
25 | ‘ It was like a collective , you could either buy the porn through the mail , or you could send in a tape of yourself and get plugged into the apparatus that way , ’ explains David James , a film professor at the University of Southern California , who has researched the phenomenon . |
26 | I remember that it could whack a fist-sized stone well over the creek and twenty metres or more into the undulating ground on the mainland , and once I got keyed into its natural rhythm I could send off a shot every two seconds . |
27 | Who did I think I was imagining glibly that I could bring up a child all by myself ? |
28 | In fact you could bring quite a bit of it in and put it in the fridge . |
29 | On Aug. 13 , 1989 , Richard Darman , head of the administration 's Office of Management and Budget ( OMB ) , publicly warned that high interest rates could bring about a recession , but such differences of opinion were played down on Oct. 13 by the Secretary of the Treasury , Nicholas Brady . |
30 | If the forces unleashed are sufficient to overcome bureaucratic inertia and corruption they could bring about a transformation which will have even greater impact and importance than the development of the NHS in Britain . |