Example sentences of "may [adv] [adv] have [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | It should be a close , hard game but Cushendall may perhaps just have the edge . |
2 | They may not even have a friend . |
3 | You ca n't have an overdraft and you may not even have a bank account . |
4 | Some of those universities who do demand a dissertation may not deposit copies with the British Library , and may not even have a copy available for inter-library loan . |
5 | To recapitulate , it is clear that differences in national legislation may not only have the effect of preventing a good or service produced in one state being sold in another , but may also distort conditions of competition between manufacturers or suppliers located in different Member States of the Community . |
6 | It is noteworthy that old people may not always have a sense of choice about whether or not to go into residential care . |
7 | For instance someone with a sore throat may well also have a fever and you will get a fuller picture by looking at the remedies in both sections . |
8 | Nevertheless he may well still have a remedy against the dealer . |
9 | However , if the item in question was sent overseas then please wait at least one month before sending in the claim form to allow sufficient time for delivery , but do try to submit it within four months from the date of despatch , otherwise the Foreign Administration may no longer have a record of delivery . |
10 | People who were housegroup leaders may no longer have a group to lead . |
11 | But many commentators believe that there are points of common interest between the government , the traffickers and the traditional ruling class , and that Mr Barco , a lame-duck president in the closing months of his administration , may no longer have the power within his own party to sustain his offensive . |
12 | ‘ I did wonder , ’ said Sophia at last in desperation , ‘ whether I had committed a grave social error in asking you to dinner alone when you may very well have a mother , wife or fiancee who should have been invited too . ’ |
13 | An object as a temporally extended existent may very well have the predicate p at time t , and the predicate not-p at time t . |