Example sentences of "might be [verb] from [art] [noun] " 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 Since there are no authenticated figures showing the costs of running the lift , some idea might be gained from the records of running costs of the Anderton Lift .
4 As might be guessed from the nature of the Saxons and their land , Charles was soon forced to return and re-establish his supremacy .
5 There are several possible ways of administering tests which might be derived from the Cockcroft Committee 's recommendations .
6 There were also considerable unexplained amounts being paid into his bank account that the inspector thought might be derived from the company .
7 Marulić also wrote in Latin , as might be expected from a man who had studied in Padua .
8 ‘ 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 . ’
9 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 .
10 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 ] .
11 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 .
12 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 . ’
13 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 . ’
14 There was little in the way of negotiation or managed change of the sort which might be expected from the Cockburn model .
15 As might be expected from the study of mortality data acute health problems are not equally distributed throughout the population .
16 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 .
17 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 .
18 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 .
19 A number of inferences might be drawn from the patterns which emerge ; but a particular advantage of this method of analysis is that it points up rather clearly the effect of linguistic environment on variation and allows the main phonetic locus of differences between the sexes in each of the communities to be specified .
20 The main conclusions that might be drawn from the study are :
21 Additional information regarding the settlements of the period might be gleaned from the study of place-names .
22 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 .
23 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 .
24 In Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams [ 1957 ] 1 WLR 370 , Denning LJ suggested that a binding promise might be inferred from the circumstances if the seller stated a fact which was or should be within his own knowledge , and of which the buyer was ignorant , intending that the buyer should act upon it , and with the result that the buyer did act upon it .
25 Marshall wondered , first , whether NPVs for investment to increase market share would always be positive or negative as might be inferred from the BCG matrix .
26 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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