Example sentences of "might have have [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I 've always , I might 've had a little moan , but I 've always to myself |
2 | I might have had a splendid pad , |
3 | ‘ They might have had a good sleep — but we certainly have n't ! ’ |
4 | Walking into a parliament of psychologists , like the governing Council of the British Psychological Society ( BPS ) , she might have had a similar reaction . |
5 | Can you please tell us which members of the club might have had a specific motive for wishing to get rid of Sir Conrad ? ’ |
6 | ‘ Is there anybody who might have had a serious grudge against your father ? ’ |
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 | If it had done that , we might have had a sensible dialogue with British Rail , but it did not . |
9 | When Myra was regressed she was unable to come up with anything which might have had a distressing effect upon her before the incident with her cousin . |
10 | She might have had a brief illness best treated outside the home , or it is possible that the balance of her mind was disturbed in some way . |
11 | 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 . |
12 | I might have had a different man , a bigger apartment , a bigger car , travel that way instead of this . |
13 | They might have had a miraculous escape . |
14 | Jimmy grinned — at any other time Leith might have had a quiet word with him about his cheek . |
15 | Had he had the same nightmare at any other time , it might have had no particular meaning to him at all . |
16 | The speaker feels — and do n't we all ? — that if he had been around then he might have had the good fortune to cut a greater dash in the subject than he is succeeding in doing in present circumstances . |
17 | Although most of the adjustments Valuev proposed to the statutes of emancipation appeared to favour the gentry at the expense of the peasantry , one of them , the abolition of the peasant commune , might have had the opposite effect , and none of them was designed to turn the clock back . |
18 | She might have had an unknown liver defect or the symptoms were induced by the drug . |
19 | ‘ If he 'd been he 'd been wearing one , he might have had an open casket . ’ |