Example sentences of "[pers pn] might [vb infin] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Cos I might go out one night and I might say I might meet up with a with a another white man or another you know a black man or something , |
2 | I had thought I might stroll out towards the famous Liseberg Gardens , but I got no more than a couple of hundred yards before I was turned back by the pitiless downpour . |
3 | ‘ I should love to see them sometime , ’ said Charles , ‘ but I wonder if I might sit down for a little ? |
4 | Now I might sit down on the beach and have a good blub . ’ |
5 | In a more complex case I might sit in on a discussion within a committee but begin to consider that it is not moving in a direction that suits me . |
6 | I might be starting at Crewe or Rochdale , but I might end up at the top . ’ |
7 | On each trip I overheard snatches of the bar-room conversations and could hear the louder buzz of continuing upheaval along in the lounge , and I thought that after I 'd satisfied everyone in the dining room I might drift along to the far end with my disarming little tray . |
8 | That 's why I was thinking I might hang on to the Volvo for another two years until you 've got your own car and then I can buy what I really want . |
9 | I thought I might catch up on a few chores instead . |
10 | And I also have a bunch of instruments that I might try out in a song ; you get to know what each one will do , but you still have to try two or three to see which has the best voice for the tune . ’ |
11 | For example , if I 'm starting college and searching for somewhere to live , I might come up with a dozen possible ideas . |
12 | Do you think I might come in for a few minutes and talk to you about Matilda ? ’ |
13 | It 's all right , sweetie , I 'm not coming back with a bone through my nose , but I might come back with a bit less of a bone in my head . |
14 | I tell you what , I might come back in an hour when the fireworks start . |
15 | Tell you who I might phone up in a minute |
16 | Really , well I , I think I might pop down on the roses next year . |
17 | Actually I might put down for a s . |
18 | If there 's insufficient space for the army of fans , many of them might end up on the beaches , which the Italian police have expressly forbidden . |
19 | These tournaments were also not being played on clay , and she obviously felt that participation in the Olympics would damage her chances on the tournament circuit , where failure to defend her points would mean that she might drop out of the top 100 in world rankings . |
20 | This made it all the harder for the mother to treat the ailing youngster and she might give up on the treatment for this reason . |
21 | Madame swept in while Ellie hesitated , afraid that any moment she might wake up from a dream . |
22 | I did n't know whether you might stop off at the pub or something . |
23 | did n't know whether you might stop off at the pub . |
24 | He points out that this safety exercise is about assessing risk where one set of circumstances might be alright within that particular discipline , but when you actually put that along the side of a similar sort of marginal safe systems , that are in other disciplines , er th that you might end up with a conflict or or or highlighting some form of erm er permutation , that could end up in in what satisfies all the codes and regulations and blue books and whatever , but at the end of can do this and nobody else can . |
25 | If you leave it til the last minute and you question spot , you might end up in a sticky situation How many people here have failed an exam ? |
26 | M. B. If you were lucky you might just get told off by the superintendent or you might go up before the chief constable where you could be fined . |
27 | Quite how to choose your destination is not clear : You might set out for a holiday in Virgo and end up in the Crab Nebula . |
28 | The way things are , you might struggle on for a few months . |
29 | No , you might puke up on the way |
30 | All the novel is intended to be is a bit of fun — something that you might pick up at an airport and that takes you through the journey in a pleasant fashion . |