Example sentences of "might be [verb] from [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He also suggested that a government might be formed from a coalition of post-Solidarity parties which would choose their own leadership .
2 The rearmost sections of the leading edges might be detached from the joining ferrules .
3 As might be guessed from the nature of the Saxons and their land , Charles was soon forced to return and re-establish his supremacy .
4 There are several possible ways of administering tests which might be derived from the Cockcroft Committee 's recommendations .
5 There were also considerable unexplained amounts being paid into his bank account that the inspector thought might be derived from the company .
6 Marulić also wrote in Latin , as might be expected from a man who had studied in Padua .
7 ‘ That the architect of the ‘ cheerful ’ Cemetery Chapel at Woking [ Tite ] should bear a grudge against the architect of St. Giles 's , Camberwell , [ Scott ] is , perhaps , no more than might be expected from a spirit of professional rivalry degenerated into envy . ’
8 Hustle the Panda along your average back road and you 'll find none of the woolliness that might be expected from a car of this price range .
9 Polymer samples are normally polydisperse and it is of interest to examine the type of average molecular weight that might be expected from a measurement of *lsqb ; η ] .
10 She had already gathered that her new employer was extremely well connected and , as might be expected from a woman of her standing , required absolute discretion of her staff and the encouragement of her children in a properly modest attitude to the family 's privileged position .
11 Uvedale Price objects in 1810 to villages like Nuneham Courtenay ( Fig. 23a ) on aesthetic grounds , as might be expected from an advocate of the picturesque : ‘ Such a methodical arrangement saves all further thought and invention ; but it is hardly necessary to say that nothing can be more formal and insipid . ’
12 We want to know precisely what funds the trust handles , where those funds are , and what regular income might be expected from the capital sum . ’
13 As might be expected from the study of mortality data acute health problems are not equally distributed throughout the population .
14 However , to get him to the point where he might be weaned from the ventilator , one must allow him to sleep and get stronger , so if it was that kind of day or that kind of period , he might have more sedation than other times .
15 He hoped , in his address , that Finance and Political Economy might be removed from the sphere of party contention ; that the spirit of science might be imported into politics .
16 Knowing her husband , if he could be led to believe that the royal castle of Berwick might be alienated from the crown and actually given to him for his services , he would be the more apt to accede to the arrangement , being a man of acquisitive mind .
17 The main conclusions that might be drawn from the study are :
18 Additional information regarding the settlements of the period might be gleaned from the study of place-names .
19 However , as might be anticipated from the progress registered earlier in connection with improvements regarding alcohol knowledge , attitudes and behaviour , instead of 53 per cent only 42 per cent of the ‘ five or more ’ male offenders were reconvicted .
20 Similarly , a patient with dyspepsia would need an internal examination by a consultant because he might be suffering from an ulcer which could be quickly treated by drugs , preventing weeks of suffering .
21 A spokesman said as much as 70 per cent of the food being airlifted and trucked into the city might be disappearing from the distribution system .
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