Example sentences of "who [modal v] have [vb pp] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 These tasks may be conducted by the originator or one or more of the consultants who may have expressed a willingness to help .
2 Police want to interview anyone who was in the wine bar on Wednesday evening who may have seen a woman drinking with a man .
3 Detectives are trying to find two men who may have witnessed a murder in a quiet country hamlet .
4 You are all familiar with our loyal supporters , but what about those people on the fringes who may have given a donation or done something for Save The Children in the past , but never really followed it up and there are the people who are interested who think , it 's a charity I feel I ought to support .
5 We made sure that er on each occasion er we reached a figure or a set of figures that would be mutually acceptable to ask the colleague or colleagues and , and then it was registered in the minutes as a , so we could refer back to er any cases er that were similar and that then made life easier for the shop stewards er who may have had a recurrence of the same problem .
6 Another complaint was that the trial judge failed to give the jury any warning about the evidence of Zaidie and Matadial as witnesses who may have had a purpose of their own to serve or whose evidence could be tainted by an improper motive .
7 Pathfinders Tours , who should have had a steam run along the North Wales Coast last Sunday behind Princess Margaret Rose , told us that they have agreed a provision new date with British Rail of August 23rd , featuring the same locomotive .
8 ‘ I never saw one thing she wanted that did not sell , ’ but nonetheless insisted that this undisciplined approach was unacceptable for a customer trying to furnish a house , who might have kept a sample for six weeks only to find she could not reorder the same fabric .
9 Really to protect members of the management team who might have made a decision .
10 Michael Banks had been a man who inspired love , but even so Charles could produce quite a list of people who might have had a grudge against him .
11 Unfortunately , I think they are few in number ; they are mainly young intellectuals who might have had a career but now can not .
12 He continued to stare at the ground as she added , ‘ I 'm just wondering who might have had a motive for killing him . ’
13 Traders who might have started a line in meal for the populace would not even think of it , knowing that the government was always ready to step in and depress the price .
14 The investigators were disturbed by the sheer size of the movie audience , and , thinking of that statistic of 115 million people a week , they asked : ‘ When has the globe ever known the like ? ’ and ‘ Who could have imagined a population more nearly , more inclusively , unified by a single agency ? ’
15 Table 2.2 links the number of students who could have achieved a degree award by the summer of 1987 with the number of awards actually made .
16 If the known mosaics belonged to private rather than official or religious buildings , this might indicate the presence of wealthier individuals who could have formed a town council , as might the marked concentration of late villas in the area , including that at Ilchester Mead , just outside the south-western suburbs .
17 The detractors say they are relative newcomers who would have constituted a gamble .
18 But there are always one or two who would have preferred a colleague to a stranger even if they hated his guts .
19 It would have been a foolish , bull-necked man who would have looked a gift horse in the mouth … so I like to see myself in a small way as following in his footsteps . ’
20 So to our surprise of this cohort of patients who would have had a T U R , only about a third had obstruction .
21 What may prove to be important for future generations of elderly people in terms of care and living arrangements , is the numbers who will have experienced a divorce .
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