Example sentences of "[noun sg] might [vb infin] [det] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | As there is no way of knowing how many synonyms exist for any given home address , an unsuccessful search might require half the file to be scanned on average . |
2 | The Indian kids would n't matter , but the Yuppie type might get half an hour in the back of a police car checking the pavements and the pub car parks for some sign of his attacker . |
3 | That half might make all the difference . |
4 | I think basically having having heard the argument put forward from from both sides what what we 're really talking about is a is a policy that in in terms of its support from the districts it depends whether or not any particular district council might have such a use for the policy . |
5 | Were such laws to be extended to the treatment of humans as well as animals , as suggested by the Williams Committee , the international community might find such an example more appealing . |
6 | Social reform might assist such a victory , but it had to be of a kind which the Lords would not reject . |
7 | The right ski might make all the difference . |
8 | Even a woman might secure such an appointment if she were an influential tenant-in-chief : Isabel Countess of Arundel kept the castle and forest of Bere Porchester in Hampshire from 1268 until 1272 . |
9 | A derrick winch , even a coffee-grinder in the galley might provide all the impulse it requires . ’ |
10 | If only they 'd had as much sex as Pulp , this childish dry wank might have half a hint of the lascivious , mobile intercourse it so pathetically promises . |
11 | An independent Central Bank might provide such a restraint , and so might the constitutional amendment , suggested in Friedman and Friedman ( 1980 ) , which obliges the government to expand the money stock at some fixed rate and which would make cheating on this obligation illegal . |
12 | The bulk of this chapter is , therefore , written with the possibility in mind that the reader might use such a system to help identify gaps in any present personal library , or to lay the structure for a proposed collection of books . |