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

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1 What I hope — very much hope — is that you , after consideration , may make the same choice .
2 We may show the same kind of symptom but with different degrees of severity or persistence .
3 Difference ( 4 ) — the interlinked corpus difference — leads to a problem with the name-space : one author may choose a name for an object , and another author may choose the same name for a completely different type of object .
4 On the ‘ beefed-up ’ engine front we have Genicom making more of the speed advantage than their increased resolution while Agfa are hardly making any noise at all about either of their 400dpi devices — although they may feel the same anxiety pangs as AM Varityper given that they also own Compugraphic .
5 Even a single G protein may regulate more than one effector by virtue of its subunit structure and that more than one G protein , such as G i2 and G i3 , may regulate the same effector ( PLC- β2 ) by releasing common subunits , the βγ dimers .
6 The exception might be the synthesis of information which may achieve the same aim as analysis .
7 They may repeat the same step but the ports de bras or épaulement may change at each repeat .
8 ‘ … the biogeographer may study the same phenomena as the ecologist , but he usually places as much emphasis on the distributional aspects as on the environmental relationships in this study .
9 At least your writing to us may prevent the same thing happening to another reader .
10 However , someone seeing you may do the same thing using a crude ‘ dead man ’ to hold the fuselage upright .
11 Professional installers may use the same materials , or perhaps special machinery to blow a blanket of loose mineral wool or fire-proofed cellulose fibre into the loft .
12 In the Arab world this is not so ; the managing director may use the same office as the general clerks , so the salesperson must be careful how he speaks to people !
13 American English may use the same words as ‘ English ’ English , but with a different meaning .
14 Speakers of Standard English in different parts of the British Isles and elsewhere in the world may use the same grammar and vocabulary , but different pronunciation .
15 Two dangers with cliches such as ‘ May all their troubles be little ones ’ are that older members of the audience have heard them before and that the previous speaker may use the same joke or saying .
16 Within this text , which ends after Mome Elwis 's speech in reply , a speech that matches that of Dame Sirith when she initially protects herself , the wretched clerk finds that the only answer he gets is a speech that matches his own for its wordiness and clichéd character — a speech in which Mome Elwis well may mouth the same formulae as Dame Sirith in the equivalent situation , as quoted above .
17 However , such smokers may incur the same risks and may even increase them , especially if they inhale the pipe or cigar smoke [ 9 ] .
18 We are concerned that rehabilitation may face the same problems as re-introduction or re-stocking in conservation — difficult , expensive , and the results often uncertain .
19 Before long West Germany 's Bundestag may confront the same problem : the federal elections late next year could give the Republicans enough votes to achieve representation — and not necessarily at the expense of Hans-Dietrich Genscher 's Free Democrats .
20 He used it to explain how different chemical compounds may contain the same elements in the same proportions — ‘ isomerism ’ — because their atoms are differently arranged , and how different substances may have the same crystalline form — ‘ isomorphism ’ — because they have the same number of atoms in the same arrangement .
21 Two people may analyse the same thing in a different way .
22 They they may draw the same compound but making the same structural formula , but drawn slightly differently !
23 Although a group of children or adults may read the same text , it is likely that each person will gain a different ‘ reading ’ and will respond to the shared text in different ways .
24 In observing the behaviour of the slimmer and the anorexic , we may read the same text , ‘ I want to lose weight . ’
25 The first is a moral one , that if chimpanzees are really like man they may have the same capacity to understand what is happening to them and imagine their futures , which would make laboratory studies , especially physiological interventions , unacceptable .
26 And now it may have the same problem over here .
27 But the theory 's current predictions may have the same error .
28 The problem is that although the typeface may have the same name — indeed it may even come from the same original — it may not have been coded up in the same way .
29 Two methods may have the same selection of structure , vocabulary and meaning , yet differ in the order in which they teach it .
30 They may have the same selection but a different gradation .
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