Example sentences of "[noun sg] might have a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The stranger might have a warrant for their arrest .
2 Who knows , our radar might have a day off . ’
3 Thus , a settlement might have a church , a manor house , a village green , road junction , and/or pond as foci .
4 In other words , a particular course might have a number of subjects associated with it .
5 If this method is barred because the headmaster does not agree that the child might have a learning difficulty called dyslexia , then the parents will have to go outside the school system and possibly go to the Dyslexia Institute at Staines , where a full assessment is carried out , with a report , which is sent to the parents .
6 Typically a group might have a system of going round the table , letting everyone have their say .
7 She had not , however , until last night , supposed that her husband might have a living near the Julians .
8 I thought the old place might have a ghost , you know .
9 Although the authors concluded that the results indicated that mycobacteria might have a role in the pathogenesis of Crohn 's disease , a further search for mycobacteria in the affected intestinal tissue with antibodies to M paratuberculosis strain linda , M tuberculosis , and the common mycobacterial antigen lipoarabinomannan failed to find a positive reaction in any of 67 specimens from 30 affected patients .
10 It would be well into the 1920s before the majority of geneticists began to concede that natural selection might have a role to play by regulating the spread of mutated characters within the population .
11 An organisation might have a structure which reflects a sin culture ; on the other hand , different structures reflecting different cultures might exist in separate parts ( or departments ) of the organisation .
12 A glance at the ‘ qualities ’ revealed that Froggy 's death had certainly not made either the front or the back page , but I guessed that the Daily News might have a headline somewhere .
13 In any case , my father was obviously a bit of an embarrassment to his brother : Harold Swan pressed home the point that my father might have a fit during a performance .
14 If the list really could go on and on , my hypothetical philosopher might have a point .
15 In Whitaker 's character brief to writers , Ian was stipulated as being a teacher of applied science , a 27-year-old graduate from an English ‘ red brick ’ university on whom the Doctor 's teenage companion might have a crush .
16 ‘ You ca n't dismiss the possibility that the old man might have a plan , ’ Gabriel said stiffly .
17 The seriousness of the offence might have a role to play , though not a conclusive one .
18 For example , Albion Bank might have a dollar balance with Big Apple Bank in New York and a DM balance with Fritz Bank in Frankfurt ( am Main ) .
19 Great diversity was important ; a city after all was more than a set of carefully structured spatial patterns , it was a social system where environmental disorder might have a place in reflecting cultural diversity .
20 He had been given so many things to digest , not the least that it was possible Celia might have a father still living .
21 How curious that last week 's suggestion that a cabinet minister might have a link with such activities should bring the threat of damnation from a prominentlibel lawyer .
22 I think your mother might have a surprise for you . ’
23 We previously proposed that restorative proctocolectomy might have a role in the management of patients with continued constipation despite subtotal colectomy and ileorectal anastomosis if there was objective evidence of slow transit constipation .
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