Example sentences of "[prep] which [pers pn] might be " in BNC.

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1 Finally , there is the Governing Board of the College , of which you might be one of the student representatives .
2 Advise Arthur , Bert and Charlie as to any rights of action they might have in tort against Chartist plc and as to any defences with which they might be met .
3 4(5) This Act applies in respect of births after ( but not before ) its passing , and in respect of any such birth it replaces any law in force before its passing , whereby a person could be liable to a child in respect of disabilities with which it might be born ; but in section 1(3) of this Act the expression ‘ liable in tort ’ does not include any reference to liability by virtue of this Act , or to liability by virtue of any such law .
4 ( 3 ) The Act of 1976 expressly recognised the possibility that under the pre-existing law ‘ a person could be liable to a child in respect of disabilities with which it might be born ’ see section 4(5) .
5 ‘ This Act applies in respect of births after ( but not before ) its passing , and in respect of any such birth it replaces any law in force before its passing , whereby a person could be liable to a child in respect of disabilities with which it might be born ; …
6 to develop and pilot-test items and consider the nature of the tests into which they might be assembled ;
7 Sainte-Engrâce was until very recently a remote settlement , because the road into the valley was also the only road out ; as a consequence it had a fine tradition for smuggling , since the last thing Basque smugglers ever wanted was good roads along which they might be pursued by excise men far less agile or locally knowledgeable than themselves .
8 Perhaps what is most important is that the nature of such identifiable UFO categories , and the conditions under which they might be observed , are predictable , after careful analysis of the data .
9 The model takes such actions for granted because its reduction of macro to micro has bracketed out the conditions under which it might be put in question .
10 Those who advocate tough policies , particularly those who do not seriously question the broad political economic context in which they might be implemented ( such as Hardin 1977 ; Hardin & Baden 1977 ) , underestimate these difficulties and some obvious lessons from history .
11 ‘ What was needed was a new look at the problems and the ways in which they might be solved , both in the UK and elsewhere .
12 Having grasped the educational import of the manyattas , Windley cast around for ways in which they might be adapted for administrative purposes .
13 By the end of the war the Colonial Office was accustomed to thinking synoptically about Africa , to weighing with unaccustomed confidence and delusive clarity the large forces at work there and the ways in which they might be accommodated within a system of administration .
14 In the face of even further diversion of financial resources for training away from special needs , can we build on what expertise we have to find economic and yet effective ways to overcome the present difficulties , to deepen all teachers ' understanding of learning and behaviour problems and of the way in which they might be resolved within the learning situation of the classroom ?
15 This leads naturally to a review of the nature and potential of collective actors and the field of action in which they might be engaged .
16 In all this , we are dealing with the implicit , contrary themes of attitudinal arguments and the contexts in which they might be developed explicitly .
17 The complexity of these relations , and the manner in which they might be used as a model of dynamic mechanisms to extend the concept of objectification from a simple dialectical cycle , is evident in Klein 's discussion of infantile hallucinatory gratification .
18 Our notions of who constitutes the academic community , the freedoms at stake , and the ways in which they might be protected , all develop over time .
19 That is not an unreasonable thing to do when one considers the circumstances in which they might be living .
20 This is just as true of whole group dramas in which we might be working in role alongside the children as in small group work or performance based work .
21 That will give you a fair idea of the sort of environment in which institutions are placed , and the sort of environment in which you might be happy , and again , go for the environment in which you think you will be happiest .
22 What I do not possess , however , is any suitable travelling clothes — that is to say , clothes in which I might be seen driving the car — unless I were to don the suit passed on by the young Lord Chalmers during the war , which despite being clearly too small for me , might be considered ideal in terms of tone .
23 Should anyone be interested , I would gladly co-ordinate their efforts — one of the few ways in which I might be able to help the Society from this distance ’ .
24 However , the association between homosexuality and femininity is not necessarily insulting to either ; on the contrary , as Kaja Silverman shows , there are ways in which it might be just the reverse , especially when we contest the stereotypes of both .
25 By showing in what circumstances a firm 's value would not be affected , Messrs Modigliani and Miller provided clues for the circumstances in which it might be .
26 Although only tentative conclusions can be drawn from such a small sample , the content of the completed schedules does demonstrate the type of information that they are capable of engendering , and the ways in which it might be used .
27 The legality of the threat of use of a weapon therefore depends on an evaluation both of the characteristics of the weapon and of the possible circumstances in which it might be used .
28 Can one imagine any circumstances in which it might be possible to launch the Continent-wide equivalent of a Buy British campaign ?
29 This research aims to explore the nature of this impairment and examine ways in which it might be overcome .
30 Even so , this is still largely an unmapped terrain , and the research strategy adopted here is one which aims to clarify some of the issues involved in inter-agency work and to identify areas of work in which it might be usefully advanced together with the limits and obstacles to its development .
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