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

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1 As there is a danger that people will be confused and might buy from the second retailer thinking that they are buying from the other , he should be able to obtain an injunction preventing the second retailer from continuing to use the name he has chosen .
2 AS ONE might expect from a professional prosecutor , Barbara Mills , the Director of Public Prosecutions , last week called for defendants to lose the right to choose trial by jury .
3 As you might expect from a Swedish manufacturer , the heating and ventilation are superb ; you can supply cold air to the face and warm air to the feet at the same time .
4 The Saturday Review described the scheme as the ‘ sort of meagre and crude distribution of all the allotted space — and of a great deal more besides — into parallelograms , which we might expect from the speculative projector of Great Franklin Pierce City , Nebraska ’ .
5 The other inhibition is more pragmatic : fear of unlimited losses on short positions that might result from a sudden market rally .
6 Such official intervention may in theory reduce the degree of exchange rate volatility , and so partially reduce the uncertainty in world trade that might result from a free float .
7 It 's just that we thought the programme might benefit from a new face .
8 Though Wimbledon 's players , after a few bottles of Beck 's lager , no doubt named after Cambridge 's late , lamented manager John , are not most people 's idea of convivial company , one does wonder whether manager Ferguson and his uptight team might benefit from a little relaxation a la Jones .
9 In response to figures suggesting that 250,000 people might benefit from the minimum wage but 100,000 might lose their jobs , he said ‘ I do not accept your figures . ’
10 This is one instance where public managers have something to teach their private sector colleagues , who might benefit from the traditional training of public administrators in policy analysis and political science ( Chandler 1992 ) .
11 An agreement between two or more competing manufacturers whose combined market share exceeds 20 per cent of the market for the appropriate products in the EC or a substantial part of it would not however be exempted under the 1985 block exemption ( though it might benefit from an individual exemption ) .
12 They suggest that he could become the country 's national president in any strongly reformist administration that might emerge from the current upheaval .
13 ( 2 ) Provide the Chairman with a note for each item of business , giving him the previous history of the discussion and indicating not the decision but at least the possible decisions that might emerge from the current meeting .
14 Ho , as well as Bao Dai , was to be consulted and it would be put to him that if he was the real nationalist which he professed to be he would ‘ accept loyally the decisions and mandates of the government and the subsequent constituent assembly , etc. and bind himself unequivocally not to … subvert the true nationalism of his people or a government that might emerge from the multilateral effort ’ .
15 He saw the advantages that England might gain from a successful coup in Scotland by them , which would take their political pressure off him at home .
16 This might vary from a simple assessment to a formal safety case .
17 The apples were harvested in autumn by using long poles to shake the branches of the trees , and then reduced to pulp in a cider mill , which might vary from a small hand machine to a large mill driven by horsepower .
18 The national coach could not rule out the possibility , either , that Ferguson might go from the under-21 squad to the full international pool at Ibrox in the space of 24 hours .
19 Some support for this might come from the archaeological evidence , which attests Kenchester 's increasing importance through time .
20 What is different in the Banbury situation erm is that fact that you are not only talking about one school and it 's education because Banbury School draws not only it 's own eleven to sixteen year old children , who have the option to go forward to the sixth form , but of course all the children that come from the Warriner School at Bloxham , all the children that come from Drayton School , and a certain number of the children who might come from the Roman Catholic Secondary School in Banbury , so there are a whole lot more people involved than just the actual children , and that 's what made Banbury a hybrid .
21 Qualifying support was therefore altered to 50 town councillors only , of which a maximum of 10 might come from the same region .
22 The main thrust of this passage , it must be said , was to instil a measure of resolve into jurors who , even if intellectually convinced , might shrink from the unwelcome duty of convicting on a capital charge , but the words emphasised above show that the judge ( who had earlier adverted to the burden of proof ) was also telling the jury to concentrate on the evidence .
23 If , however , the mantle itself is divided into two convecting layers , plumes might rise from the internal boundary between them , perhaps the seismic discontinuity at 660 km depth .
24 Therefore , the only additional benefits which can be identified in Figure 8.5 are those which might accrue from the competitive structure which the government is proposing to create .
25 I E you 're not really looking at a feudal economy in the south any more i it may be a much more heavily commercial capitalist economy and therefore the kind of land reform programme that you might incorporate from a feudal north might not be entirely relevant .
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