Example sentences of "might [adv] [verb] to a [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The more experienced dealers guessed it might paradoxically refer to a disaster on the horizon , but kept their thoughts from clients . |
2 | He suggests therefore that perhaps the return of a third successive Conservative administration might not lead to a widening of social class inequalities . |
3 | You might just get to a goal that is difficult to master , or you could find that when you are about half-way through your goals you get stuck and can go no further . |
4 | You might just pop to a corner shop to buy some chocolate and som box of matches , some sweets a magazine , a newspaper . |
5 | The Law Society 's rules of professional conduct do provide exemptions for this , but even so , a conveyancer should not be too quick to use those exemptions if acting for both sides might conceivably lead to a compromise or a difficult situation . |
6 | ‘ In the present spirit of the age , ’ Surtees replied with a sidelong glance at Catherine , ‘ more generous provision from the public purse might even lead to a proliferation of bastardy . |
7 | Fossils fascinate him too , and he says that he might even look to a career in palaeontology . |
8 | Moreover , an inconclusive rule might well lead to a preference for uncertainty , if that can be positively exploited . |
9 | The framework of support so established might well lead to a partnership between schools and LEAs which gives more effective support to those working within the institution . |