Example sentences of "could [adv] [be] [verb] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Enoch Powell , who needed nobody to tell him that he could n't win ( he knew that perfectly well ) , was not the object of anything that could properly be called a campaign : he was a loner with just a few devoted friends behind him . |
2 | ‘ … considered that a casual with a skilled trade may have his efficiency seriously impaired by being required to break stones and may , in order to avoid this task , feel compelled to sleep out or to commit some other offence against the law ; that it is impossible to expect the officer in charge of a casual ward to discriminate between men for whom the task would or would not be suitable , and that this would lay him open to accusations of favouritism or vindictiveness ; that the task could rarely be made a profitable one , and is repugnant to the class of workers most liable to unemployment , being looked upon by them as having penal associations and as entirely deterrent . ’ ) |
3 | In the North , the bishops pursued the Irish catholic community 's interests in what could only be called a spirit of ‘ pillarization ’ . |
4 | MYSELF and Marco Polo is a working model of a novel , a clever toy , a verbal tournament , a facetious blueprint for a possible future seriousness : it could only be called a success if its author 's aim was merely to intrigue , and I do not feel that Paul Griffiths can be that crude . |
5 | It could only be given a new lease of life by grounding its themes in a transformed image of a much more efficient , modernised , client-centred public sector , to which Labour has not yet seriously directed itself . |
6 | Obviously something like a car could only be considered a bribe ; on the other hand a vacuum cleaner , say , may be too expensive to give away in bulk but could certainly be offered for comparative testing . |
7 | I was going through what could only be described a ‘ drop-out ’ period . |
8 | Indeed , the primitive matchlocks could only be discharged a maximum of sixteen times during a whole day of battle . |
9 | The bulk of the textile manufacturers in northern France at the same period were similarly children of what could already be considered the middle strata ; the bulk of the mid-nineteenth-century Nottingham hosiery manufacturers had similar origins , two-thirds of them actually coming from the hosiery trade . |
10 | This is a choice ( whether conscious or unconscious is a different matter ) , but could scarcely be called a style . |
11 | UP and coming Farnham band Feel could soon be spearheading a wave of fresh talent intent on reviving a staid top forty . |
12 | Lynda says that she did think long and hard about changing careers — not least about the fact that as a Stoy 's partner she could soon be drawing a six figure profit share , compared to the substantially lower salary she would get at C&R . |
13 | Football , and speculation is mounting that Oxford United 's new manager could soon be leaving the club just six weeks after he was appointed . |
14 | YOUNGSTERS with severe learning difficulties could soon be enjoying a holiday . |
15 | The skull of a Celtic princess which was dug up more than a hundred years ago could soon be given a face . |
16 | BRITAIN 'S first legal red light district could soon be given the go-ahead . |
17 | TOLLY beer from Suffolk is going down a storm among the wine drinkers of Italy.And ale from Tolly 's Cliff Brewery in Ipswich could soon be wetting the whistles of beer-lovers in Canada , Germany , Holland and France.Tolly bosses are celebrating after exporting 1,200 cases of their special Year Beer , Cantab , to Italy — and they have received inquiries from four other countries.Brian Cowie , Tolly 's joint managing director , said interest from abroad had initially come since the brewery 's name had been publicised on BBC television 's recent Troubleshooter programme . |
18 | The " plan of action " stated that " we could soon be witnessing a dramatic exodus exceeding even that of August-September 1990 " [ see p. 37697 ] . |
19 | Otters could soon be making a comeback along the banks of our rivers , if a new project launched by a wildlife trust is successful . |
20 | The firm which carried out the survey says all Gloucestershire motorists could soon be paying the price for crime in higher insurance premiums |
21 | In 1922 the capital of the guberniia could hardly be called a bastion of the proletariat . |
22 | There had already been a kerfuffle over the pornographic ones ; they could n't be included in the facsimile edition and yet at the same time it could hardly be called a complete edition if they were n't there . |
23 | The integration of its railway system — it could hardly be called a network — was a major problem . |
24 | The elongated , slightly oval hummock could hardly be called a grave , more a burial mound . |
25 | The garden could hardly be called a garden ; it was large , wild and not too well kept . |
26 | There was bougainvillaea in flower , clambering up the stone walls , small white roses on thin stalks among the weeds , and wild flowers in what could hardly be called a garden . |
27 | Now to an event that could hardly be called a sport , even though it did produce a new British champion . |
28 | LADY in black Jackie Miller could hardly be called a mo-pedestrian either . |
29 | ‘ That could hardly be called a conciliatory speech , ’ said Isambard delicately . |
30 | We had taken 120 carp and 2 cats so the trip could hardly be deemed a ’ cat-astrophe ’ ( sorry but I could n't resist it ) when suddenly one of Rick 's rods was away . |