Example sentences of "[noun] might have [verb] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Can you please tell us which members of the club might have had a specific motive for wishing to get rid of Sir Conrad ? ’
2 Also news of such extravagance might have perturbed a suspicious Emperor .
3 Gregory might have made a deliberate choice .
4 According to the evidence at the trial , only Zaidie bore witness to the defendant 's telephoned confession , but the defence might have promoted a viable theory of conspiracy if they had been able to show that Matadial had also testified to a confession , then resiled from it in her deposition , taken the offensive again in her addendum and finally opted for a female voice in her evidence .
5 Bouvard et Pécuchet would have been finished ; Madame Bovary might have been suppressed ( how seriously do we take Gustave 's petulance against the overbearing fame of the book ? a little seriously ) ; and L'Education sentimentale might have had a different ending .
6 The miners might have lost a political battle , but they had not lost a war .
7 This says that ‘ greater freedom of communication by those professional advisers to the regulators might have had a significant effect on subsequent action , and hence on the later course of events ’ .
8 But now it looked as if her job might have taken a different turn .
9 Severiano Ballesteros might have endured a long summer of discontent , pointing to both mental and physical problems for his loss of form , but his absence from the leaderboards , conspicuous though it might have been , is consistent with the capricious nature of the sport .
10 What he asked was guidance in the matter of a young man 's death , a clean young man who handled lambs with gentleness and care , as lambs of God , and never deserved to be done to death suddenly before his time , however the love of God might have set a secure hand under him as he fell , and lifted him into light .
11 A close observer might have noticed a slight stiffening of Albert 's back , but otherwise he gave no sign of hearing .
12 Are there no other types of thing for which Moore might have claimed a similar high value in isolation ?
13 ‘ Some idiot might have seen a well-dressed elderly gent near the railway line and then you could have been questioned . ’
14 Government leaders might have welcomed a united report from the Royal Commission , which could have justified real reform of the Poor Law .
15 The restrictions of office life might have formed a permanent barrier to any expression of their feelings for each other , but their relationship had grown appreciably closer when they had both stayed for part of one summer at the home of a friend , Margaret Behrens , in Mentone — although even here Valerie Fletcher still called him " Mr Eliot " .
16 Had this been the only ground of complaint , their Lordships might have reached a different conclusion on the appeal .
17 An open-fronted building at Holditch , containing cooking vessels , a large quern and an oven might have provided a similar service , while the evidence for a counter in the vicus at Greta Bridge points to another obvious gap in the evidence .
18 Flaubert might have made a similar avowal — ‘ I leave two children , Bouvard and Pécuchet ’ — because his only child , the niece who became a daughter , had departed into disapproving adulthood .
19 Jimmy grinned — at any other time Leith might have had a quiet word with him about his cheek .
20 Thirdly , more prolonged treatment might have shown a late effect .
21 And Julius Landor might have ruined a large chunk of her life , but he was n't going to ruin her birthday .
22 She thought Emma might have got a commended or highly commended .
23 He had a passionate love of music and in another world at another time might have made a fine musician , but there , held in that place at that moment , there were other plans , other duties , other paths .
24 Suddenly , Labour wobbled as it appeared that the Tories might have picked a genuine winner .
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