Example sentences of "could [vb infin] [adv prt] in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Now the choice was hers — she could stay on in the cottage for the weekend as planned , or she could cut her losses and head for home . |
2 | Dexter pressed his nose against the grid of cold metal but all he could make out in the shadowy interior was a counter and the shimmer of clothes hung up in plastic bags . |
3 | The figure in the seat was human , as far as he could make out in the murky light , but there was something about the awkward way it was sprawled in the chair that made him glad he could n't see it any clearer . |
4 | In 1970 — if you were eighteen and could lay your hands on a little ready money — it was almost de rigueur to travel overland to Greece where , in an idyllic island setting , you could hang out in the coolest way imaginable with amiable drug-dealers and liberated chicks . |
5 | The 1896 discovery by Eduard Buchner ( 1860–1917 ) that fermentation could carry on in the absence of living cells seemed like the final nail in the coffin . |
6 | It was a worry when we did n't get a pension and when it did come , it alleviated things , but we know it could run out in the New Year . |
7 | Artistic Reef , successful at Lingfield last time , could follow up in the Prestwold Conditions Stakes . |
8 | You could fit in in a number of ways . |
9 | and whereas before we could walk round in a on a circular route , Yeah that 's Walk . |
10 | But I could go up in a few weeks . |
11 | But the settlement is believed to have given Kuwait assurances that its production could go up in the summer if the market is strong enough . |
12 | Leith snapped angrily — and realised she could go on in the same vein until she was blue in the face and it still would n't dent him . |
13 | I mean , we could go back in a few days and I could distract her while you … ’ |
14 | some members of a band could go out in the evening and pop into a whole bunch of places to ask if they will give them a gig . |
15 | I really think , although I would not be prepared to put it to the test , that you could go out in the streets of London in your nightdress and nobody would notice . |
16 | Whinges about the black market for centre-court tickets are as much a part of the Wimbledon tennis championships as thunderstorms are — but this year 's new rules mean that any tout reselling tickets at Wimbledon next month could end up in a magistrate 's court . |
17 | If this frequency does n't suit you , now is the time to talk things through because otherwise you could end up in a longterm relationship in which sex is not what you thought it would be . |
18 | The runners string out in a line across the road as it is unsafe to have them five or six deep ; if one of the front runners fell , sacks of coal and people could end up in a nasty heap . |
19 | The Council could end up in a net loss position as currently there is a non-alignment of EC Development programme priorities and Regional Council capital spending priorities . |
20 | I still feel it is a dangerous proposition to be in and we could end up in a situation where development comes to a full stop . |
21 | BE good to your secretary or you could end up in the worst seats on business flights and be booked into lousy hotels . |
22 | He was at Ibrox in 1971 when 66 fans died in a crush on the steps of the stadium ; in September 1980 , he had to watch the pathetically outmatched Welsh bantam-weight Johnny Owen die at the hands of Lupe Pintor , after writing beforehand ‘ this fight could end up in the intensive care unit ’ ; and he saw the heart-bursting tension of a World Cup qualifying match kill the man with whom he had an almost filial relationship , the Celtic and Scottish national football manager , Jock Stein . |
23 | In case you had n't noticed , Ulster 's John Reid is having a barnstorming season and he could end up in the top four in the championship with over 100 winners . |
24 | In case you had n't noticed , Ulster 's John Reid is having a barnstorming season and he could end up in the top four in the championship with over 100 winners . |
25 | ‘ We could end up in the lunatic situation of the TDC having to pull it down to make way for a new development . ’ |
26 | It had not occurred to him that he could stand up in the pub , leave the beer half-drunk , the sandwich half-eaten , walk out into the London early evening . |
27 | They were not the sort you could put out in a black bin bag and hope they would be gone in the morning . |
28 | The minds of the other literate villagers were dissipated on what they could pick up in a random manner : most of it naturally consisted of religious tracts , the traditional fodder left over from the past . |
29 | Well I could come along in the evening perhaps . |
30 | Miss Monroe could come down in the morning and see her then . |