Example sentences of "may [verb] some " in BNC.

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1 Though it is often suggested that Metastrongylus may transmit some of the porcine viruses , and may enhance the effect of viruses already present in the lungs , the role of the worm is not conclusively proven .
2 Other sources of fungi which may affect some people
3 Frost-hardening may affect some tissues but not others ; it is not unusual for well-established tissues to be hardened but for buds and growing shoots to be nipped by frost .
4 The picture is complicated by the fact that national authorities may regard some discrimination between nationals and non-nationals as being necessary in order to ensure the protection of national interests such as the collection of taxes .
5 But the lessons of history would suggest that the animal protection movement , with its emphasis on the welfare of individual animals , may experience some corresponding loss of support .
6 At least you are starting with a breeding pair , but even so you may experience some disharmony .
7 You may experience some symptoms or " side effects ' from the foods under test .
8 This afternoon 's game may answer some of these questions .
9 The Government response to the Genn study for the Lord Chancellor 's Department may answer some of these questions .
10 Artificial selection may circumvent some of these difficulties .
11 If Zbo did rescue some of the earlier work , that may explain some of the muddle about the authenticated chronology of Modigliani 's work .
12 Differences in sample characteristics may explain some part of it ( for instance in Ipswich the action samples contained a higher proportion of heavily dependent people who went straight into institutions after their referral to the psychogeriatric service ) .
13 It seems to have been a religion that was in transition , which may explain some startling contradictions or apparent contradictions .
14 More accurate measurement of the risk factors may explain some of the remaining differences in sickness absence but other factors , as yet unrecognised , are likely to be important .
15 The final way of getting on to the Council in a given year was by being an ypilachó0n or stand-in , and that may explain some instances of ‘ carpet-baggers ’ , i.e. political adventurers who offered themselves as Councillors for demes other than their home deme .
16 Tony Bottoms ( 1993 ) suggests that this analysis may explain some recent developments in penal systems , such as the rise in importance of relatively impersonal and standardized penalties such as the fine .
17 The change agents , in the light of their professional values , get satisfaction out of client participation ( Bernstein , 1960 , although the findings in York , 1989 , referred to above , in the third section , may throw some doubt on this ) .
18 An analysis of the age and sex structure of unemployment and its locational distribution is of value because it may throw some light on the reasons for the growth of unemployment and the policy measures which may be most effective .
19 If the nature of such a vibration can be established it may throw some light on the nature of the electronic band .
20 Such efforts may eliminate some common inaccuracies , but no set of criteria can avoid distortion caused by the quantification of unlike incidents .
21 Figure 16–3 implies that cutting income tax rates may eliminate some of the deadweight burden of distortionary taxation , but governments should probably expect their tax revenue to decline if such policies are put into effect .
22 In these circumstances , a futures market may convey some more of the information possessed by the informed traders to the uninformed .
23 It may cover some or all of the costs .
24 Ulcers tend to run in families , and genetic factors may make some people more susceptible to aggressive factors than others .
25 This may make some sense for the bourgeois ‘ art ’ tradition ( though probably not as much as he thinks ) but when the elements of the entire musical production-consumption process become both more unified and interdependent , and more ‘ socialized ’ , it becomes less appropriate .
26 As adults often have commitments which limit their ability to travel , any concentration of subject provision or types of courses in particular institutions may make some subjects inaccessible to adults .
27 This may depress some Yorkshire folk , especially those who opposed the overseas signing , but it should not .
28 These qualification-based courses may assist some people in gaining employment , but staff feel they are perhaps more important for personal development and self-confidence .
29 At the end of key stage 3 the pupils ' response should be mainly in written form but may include some oral work .
30 Such issues may include some of those discussed in Chapter 4 , such as waiting-room queues , staff shortages , poor facilities or personality clashes .
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