Sentence examples for so as to be capable from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

To get around this, the sound stage used to represent the submarine's interior was constructed in a manner so as to be capable of rocking back and forth, with the movement being used to guide the flow of a different liquid.

The PRT was also designed so as to be capable of simultaneously obtaining TOF data.

The only question was whether it was at Rutland so as to be capable of sale there, and whether it was sold there.

The generalized self-consistent model (GSCM) is extended so as to be capable of estimating the apparent elastic properties of a finite-size specimen smaller than a representative volume element (RVE).

Given the virtually infinite malleability of software code, software upgrades and new application features, such as Web browsers, could virtually always be configured so as to be capable of separate and subsequent installation by an immediate licensee or end user.

Similar(55)

It remains, then, to consider whether all things are so constituted as to be capable both of being in motion and of being at rest, or whether, while some things are so constituted, some are always at rest and some are always in motion: for it is this last view that we have to show to be true.

Though obviously labouring under a very severe cold, which could not but affect organs of a texture so delicate as to be capable of producing such wonderful inflexions of voice, he kept the audience in a roar of laughter and applause, which was interrupted only by their anxiety to hear what would follow.

It is an open empirical question how much nativism is true about concepts, and LOTH should be so taken as to be capable of accommodating whatever turns out to be true in this matter.

Deliberation should keep partisan interests, which could threaten legitimacy by undermining the general happiness, in check: "The representative system ought … not to allow any of the various sectional interests to be so powerful as to be capable of prevailing against truth and justice and the other sectional interests combined.

One may of course disagree with the moral philosophy contained in the novel, but to suggest that the book is so vague as to be capable of justifying anything is disingenuous.

Two years later he had become 'so fond of drinking that he lost no opportunity of being intoxicated, and in that state was so savage and violent as to be capable of any mischief'.

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