Example sentences of "might [vb infin] a [noun] with " in BNC.

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1 But we might make a mistake with the title and someone .
2 I knew he had a private hope that some day he might make a book with them .
3 MOREOVER , individual examples of bias , such as the one I detected when Paddy Ashdown was allowed to get away with the ridiculous notion that he might do a deal with John Major just as easily as with Neil Kinnock , need to be balanced against the election coverage as a whole .
4 The whole process had become discredited once various members of the indigent upper classes had taken to hiring themselves out as proxy mothers to daughters of self-made industrialists , in order that they might contract a marriage with a desperate aristo .
5 No one then ever suggested that maybe I might try a pattern with two rows alike and forget the ‘ staggering ’ .
6 You might have a chance with him ! ’
7 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 .
8 I wonder if I might have a word with your son . ’
9 Might have a word with Mrs Brocklebank , he thought , just as the front door of No. 22 opened .
10 ‘ I thought I might have a word with Eddie Brady . ’
11 go and help you because I thought you know you might have a natter with him or something
12 In year groups of 200 students some 10–30 might undertake a work-experience with little preparation , follow-up or curriculum related activity .
13 She handled one of her breasts sorrowfully , the way you might handle a bird with a broken wing .
14 This year might represent a compromise with regard to the those two opposition positions which again I would suggest are something that perhaps owes more to than it does to actual political affiliation .
15 Hallin also represented producer , Chris Allison , and thought he might form a partnership with the band .
16 But he thought that Mr Asquith might form a Coalition with the Conservatives , although there again Mr Lloyd George might be a difficulty .
17 The author 's sounder proposition is that , when South Africa 's rulers at last ( perhaps too late ) released the one black leader they might strike a deal with , they marked the end of the period in which the words ‘ national liberation ’ had any meaning in Africa .
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