Example sentences of "may [verb] [noun sg] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 They would include : opportunities for students to see or experience equipment or processes which are not on offer within the institution ; the chance for a student to sample a possible future job or career ; the opportunity to learn something ( not much ) of the lives led in employment by their neighbours , their parents or their peer-group , so that they may grow up more understanding and more tolerant ( this rather pious hope may in fact be quite unjustified , they may have confirmed or developed disdain or envy for others ) ; a good student may catch the eye of an employer looking for a later recruit ; absence may lend enchantment to the view of the college and the students may return from work-experience reassured about their choice of education ; students may be motivated to work hard at college by the prospect of either securing a job like the one they have seen or tried , or by the determination to avoid a similar fate ; all these outcomes may be little more predictable than the consequences of going to the zoo for a visit .
2 The 15-member House of Chiefs considers draft legislation relating to alterations to the Constitution or to chieftaincy matters , and may make representation to the President on matters affecting the tribes or tribal organizations .
3 In respect of the transfer of properties , the agreement may include reference to the applicable provisions from the National Conditions of Sale — a national standard form set of property sale terms .
4 Commons Members unable to attend conference through sickness or because they are abroad on parliamentary business may send instruction to the secretary of the party or to a parliamentary colleague on how their vote shall be cast provided that they send to the secretary on or before the date on which conference opens an explanation in writing of their absence .
5 The teacher may negotiate modification to the feedback , to correct or improve statements made .
6 There are , after all , several senses in which a brief look at the Danish system may bring comfort to a beleaguered ‘ curriculum manager ’ in Britain in the early 1990s .
7 The need for a saturated atmosphere may give rise to a particular abundance of these Atlantic bryophytes on NE- and E-facing slopes ( Ratcliffe 1968 ) , as noted above for Herbertus aduncus .
8 There is no associated enlargement of lymph nodes , but small nodules under the surface of the shin in the groin may give rise to a ‘ pseudo-bubo ’ .
9 Alternatively a double-sided board may have an inherent capacitive characteristic when you consider that copper tracks on both sides of the board , separated by the board itself , may give rise to a dielectric effect .
10 However , where a person is induced to make a contract by a false statement this may give rise to a civil action brought by the party to whom the statement was addressed for misrepresentation under the Misrepresentation Act 1967 .
11 In addition , the making of false statements ( whether in adverts or otherwise ) which are made either knowingly or recklessly may give rise to a criminal prosecution under section 14(1) Trade Descriptions Act 1968 .
12 Although staff may have been appointed to a post With fixed hours and work schedules , a change in circumstances may give rise to a request for change .
13 Any number of circumstances may give rise to a fluctuation in workload thus upsetting staffing predictions .
14 These sequences may give rise to a kind of play , in which they are exaggerated , inverted or otherwise re-ordered in such a manner that a regular pattern or rhythm emerges in the finished product .
15 This may give rise to a civil claim for breach of contract on the part of the guest who is double-booked , and may possibly lead to the prosecution of the hoteliers for an offence under section 14 of the Trade Descriptions Act 1968 .
16 Or it may give rise to a level of customer price-sensitivity which was hitherto absent in the target market segment .
17 This is supported by General Condition 2 of the Engineering and Computer Policies which sets out the action to be taken by the Policyholder on the happening of any event which may give rise to a claim .
18 Where a policyholder 's tree has fallen and damaged third party property , this may give rise to a public liability claim ( see Section 7.4 ) .
19 The future prospects of the deceased may give rise to a higher multiplier if the deceased has good prospects ( see paras 2.22 – 2.24 above ) .
20 Such additional requirements may give rise to a special condition being attached to the back of the contract .
21 The seller will be deemed to have received proceeds equal to the capital element ( that is , exclusive of the income element ) which may give rise to a capital gain or , more likely perhaps , an allowable loss .
22 Members of this genus are common parasites of the small intestine in very young animals and , although generally of little pathogenic significance , under certain circumstances may give rise to a severe enteritis .
23 We have matching for age and for education but it is possible that people who are older and well-educated have special opinions ; such a person happens to receive X and may give rise to a spurious effect .
24 When oedema of the male genitalia occurs , it may give rise to the intriguingly-named ‘ saxophone penis ’ .
25 The answers to some of the questions posed in this booklet may give rise to the need for change .
26 The concept of an implied term , with its inevitable uncertainties , is inconsistent with the nature of an injunction , breach of which may give rise to the sanctions attendant upon contempt of court .
27 Cannabis may have few immediate withdrawal effects and this again may give rise to the mistaken belief that it is not addictive .
28 However , it may give rise to the necessity for a fairly sophisticated mathematical calculation if a conversion table is not published .
29 Where a statute imposes a duty on a person , breach of that duty may give rise to an action for damages by a person injured as a result .
30 The fruitfulness of Guscott 's passing may give pause to the justified chuntering about his failure to make tries for unmarked wingers in internationals this season .
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