Example sentences of "could [vb infin] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They could laugh at the absurdities of life and people that made no sense to those who had n't lived in Ireland .
2 And when her husband cracked another joke , she found she could laugh with the rest .
3 Then there was the time Joe Hulme asked if he could stay for the weekend in his native Lancashire after an away match at Bolton .
4 ‘ You could stay with the Ballards ; Zelah would love that . ’
5 Mrs Falconer is facing compulsory redundancy and has been told that she could stay on the staff if she accepts demotion to ordinary lecturer — a post already held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
6 " But my mistresses go home to their husbands for Christmas , and although I could stay at the Covington-Pyms and ride out with the hunt on Boxing Day morning , and call round at the Moons on my way back to cheer up poor Marie …
7 European banks could stay at the top for longer than their predecessors .
8 He could stay at the Palm Springs home of Walter Annenberg , newspaper publisher , millionaire , friend of the Shah 's friend Richard Nixon , former ambassador tot he court of St James , Sullivan was told to convey the invitation in the name of the president and to ask how many people would be travelling with the Shah .
9 Because of fuel problems each patrol could stay in the air no more than two hours , and only relatively slow and cumbersome two-seater planes could be used .
10 We tidied up our rooms and cleaned the kitchens , dragging out the mundane tasks so that we could stay in the warm .
11 He is ready , he says , to consider Syria 's ‘ vital interests ’ in Lebanon , and by that he appears to mean that its army could stay in the Beka'a Valley , provided it is clearly intended for defence against Israeli attack and not for interference in Lebanon 's internal affairs .
12 Oh , says I , aye , I says , you could stay in the village .
13 ‘ Sir John , ’ Mandeville called , ‘ I should be grateful if you could stay in the hall .
14 I could stay in the hotel , ’ I said .
15 I could stay in the house and be marked as frightened , or I could do battle with the elements , making my way to the family as usual .
16 ‘ Wow , ’ Wayne said , obviously wishing that he could stay in the front and eavesdrop .
17 He had not been able to deal so skilfully with his own wife , however , that relationship needing more of himself than he could spare from the animals , and she had left him many years ago .
18 They could explain to the child why he feels as though the world has turned upside down and why his remaining parent seems so upset .
19 She has , however , been informed that she could remain on the RGU staff if she accepted a demotion to ordinary lecturer — the post held by her sister , Mrs Barbara Diack , who , in turn , would lose her job .
20 He hoped Great Britain would support Austria-Hungary against Russia and that Germany could remain on the fence .
21 Mrs Falconer , a senior lecturer in textiles , has been told there is funding for only one textile lecturer in the school , but that she could remain on the staff if she accepted demotion to ordinary lecturer — a post already held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
22 Alternatively , Exminster could remain as the hospital for elderly mentally ill patients , allowing a planned closure of Digby Hospital after short-stay beds had been established in Torbay and North Devon .
23 The answer is straightforward : the exchange-rate mechanism would continue , run by the enlarged chamber of governors , and all currencies that were not in stage three could remain in the exchange-rate mechanism or outside it , depending on what they chose .
24 Our playmates swam quietly to the edge of the pool , while Lorne and I began to climb out until signalled that we could remain in the water if we wished .
25 Anderson ( 1971 , pp. 125–7 ) argues that the good wages which young people could earn in the cotton towns in the mid-nineteenth century altered the balance between parents and children and put them on more equal terms when they shared a household , and also made it more possible for them to leave the parental home — although boys did this more often than girls .
26 The compensation package offered is usually based on a local salary , which , when converted into sterling , is considerably higher than the workers could earn in the UK .
27 She was working for his charity for a third of what she could earn in the City , he enthused .
28 People got snappy , and nothing could compensate for the lack of leave .
29 Now we could prepare for the Jubilee without a car& in the world .
30 On Sotheby 's activities in Berlin he was candid about the difficulties experienced by this ‘ very interesting experiment ’ so far but felt that the company could build on the pool of new private ( West ) German buyers that had emerged from the sales .
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