Example sentences of "can [be] deduce " in BNC.

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1 What can be deduced from a self-portrait is often controversial ; a critic is especially likely to read into a self-portrait some opinion held about the artist .
2 This can be deduced from the surviving local parish name of Barrington which , when translated from Anglo Saxon , means ‘ the village of Barra 's people ’ .
3 The exact role of cortisol is unknown , but its importance can be deduced from the observation that animals that can not produce cortisol , due to injury for instance , are very vulnerable in emergencies .
4 The result ( which can be deduced from Fleming 's left-hand rule — the only two-fingered gesture in the school syllabus ) is a force at right angles to both the current and the magnetic field — ie , along the main axis of the boat .
5 The pores in the skin are a classic example : they ‘ can not become perceptible to us by themselves , but yet their presence in the skin can be deduced from sweat ’ .
6 This brought him into conflict with a pagan critic , and the exchange of argument can be deduced from the defence ( Apologia ) for Christianity which Justin composed and which he later supplemented with a further appendix .
7 Over the years the Ladies ' Minutes , whilst complete , give no more than a glimpse of the main Club 's activity , but it can be deduced that clubhouse alterations were made in 1914 and again in 1920 at which period the course was also altered .
8 Some of the nursing activities which might be relevant can be deduced from the following discussion , which is based on the reports of two studies of accidents in hospital .
9 Usually sentences without vowels can be deduced easily .
10 The political ambitions of the CLB can be deduced from its interpretation of the Edwardian crisis : ‘ At so critical a period in British history as the present , when there is so great and unfortunate a tendency to slackness , ease , and carelessness as to religion , morals , and work , when there is so great a craving for pleasure 's sake , when so serious a social problem as the great army of the unfit and unemployed has become a national scandal and a public danger ’ , it was necessary to provide men of the future with ‘ that spirit of self-denial , self-control and definiteness of righteous purpose ’ which had put Britain in the lead among nations .
11 However , there is an important difference between what might be called the doctrine of empiricism , and scientific theory , which must be empirical in the sense that statements can be deduced from theory which are about particular events and which can be checked by observation .
12 The effect of a double-Harrison transformation can be deduced by any number of competing techniques .
13 The effect of a double-Harrison transformation can be deduced by any number of competing techniques .
14 From this treatise and other evidence , it can be deduced that Dom Pérignon achieved the following innovations : he was the first person in Champagne to produce a truly red wine ; the first person to produce a perfectly limpid white wine from black grapes ; he invented the traditional Champagne press ; perfected the art of blending wines from many different vineyards to produce one consistent and superior cuvée , or blend ; reintroduced the cork-stopper to France ; and pioneered the use of stronger English glass to withstand the internal pressure generated by sparkling wine .
15 What can be deduced from this is that religion as he understands it involves belief in an ordered moral government of the whole universe and in the fact that religious and ethical ideals should inform all our actions .
16 A general formula can be deduced on the assumption that all constraints are of ‘ < ’ form ( as in problem P of Section 5.1 ) , in which case one feasible solution is
17 When the pivot column has been selected , the entries in the implicit rows and pivot and resource columns can be deduced from ( 7.2 ) and ( 7.3 ) .
18 The experience made me deeply grateful that nothing of the same kind , at least with current technology , can be deduced from prose .
19 From the basic shape it can be deduced that the arms were placed alongside the body , turned in at the elbows , with the hands on the groin .
20 This can be deduced from the fact that rocks of this age are typically red : the iron in them rusted , a process which can not occur without the presence of oxygen and water .
21 The deployment of a weapon system involves a threat that that system will be used in certain circumstances which to some extent can be deduced from the characteristics of the weapon system itself .
22 This is especially so for handwriting , when not only spelling errors , but also illegible words can be deduced from the context .
23 Leaf c i /c a can be deduced from the above equation when p 13 C and a 13 C are known .
24 The thicknesses of the layers can be deduced from equation ( 1 ) .
25 Further examples can be deduced in Rutland , notably the £46 credited to David Cecil at Tinwell , a small parish from which the abbot of Peterborough received £21 as lord ; Cecil was his bailiff and lived in the manor house .
26 From their rotational constants , the structures of the species can be deduced .
27 Some of the flavour and intent of each conference can be deduced from the ‘ keynote speakers ’ who , respectively , are the North American Indian installation and performance artist James A. Luna ; the promoters of the ‘ new art History ’ T.J.Clark and Griselda Pollock ; and the President of the Federal Republic of Germany , Richard von Weizsäcker .
28 Putting together what we know about girls " apprenticeships — lasting three or four years — and wage rates , it can be deduced that from the age of say 17 until perhaps 25 for those who married , women compositors were doing the equivalent of full-time typesetting for wages that varied between half and two-thirds the adult male wage , depending on whether stab or piece rates are measured .
29 Consisting of material remains — objects , buildings and other structures — there are limits as to how much can be deduced from such evidence about the people who used them .
30 Many of these factors can be deduced or estimated from surviving archaeological evidence , but other factors — such as size of population , whether farming is only at subsistence level or is producing a surplus , and if so , how large a surplus — are much more difficult to assess .
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