Example sentences of "may [vb infin] from [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 These may range from the specification of shapes , finishes and material type through casting and mould details , to jigs and fixtures needed during production .
2 The opacity of water may arise from a variety of materials in suspension , and samples from different sources may be equally opaque but contain widely varying weights of solid matter .
3 The misunderstanding that good medicine and good science are in conflict ( or worse , that there is a clash between compassion and science ) may arise from a failure to distinguish medical trials from human biological research that is neither preventive nor therapeutic .
4 A further reason for taxpayers believing that the burden of taxation is higher than it actually is may arise from a failure to understand the method of collection of income tax .
5 Static welfare losses that arise from departures from competition in output markets are set against longer-run , dynamic gains which may arise from an increase in the supply of innovations that come about in less than perfectly competitive markets .
6 The referent or antecedent of an anaphor may arise from the sentence in which the anaphor occurs or from an earlier sentence in the text .
7 The important role attributed to ‘ Motherese ’ in language development among normally developing children , has , in turn , fuelled speculation that some forms of language impairment may arise from the child having insufficient exposure to adult language or , alternatively , being among adults who adopt inappropriate styles of talking to young children .
8 Similarly , the ability to compete may arise from the use and disclosure of business secrets .
9 Arousal may arise from the appeal of the goal , the feelings that it engenders , the hormones it stimulates .
10 One of the major sources of revulsion against offenders who profit from their crimes may arise from the practice of some sections of the media to pay an offender for the right to an interview or the right to publish her or his story , so-called ‘ cheque-book ’ journalism .
11 This maxim is generally quoted as explaining certain implications which may arise from the fact that , or the circumstances under which , an owner of land grants or demises part of it , retaining the remainder in his own hands .
12 A proposal for a Private Member 's Bill may emanate from the Member himself , or may have been urged upon him by another Member or Members , or by an outside pressure or interest group .
13 The company has promised to restore the site to its original condition , and to mine only small areas at a time , but there are fears that many species may disappear from the area and that the dunes will never fully recover .
14 The aggression may spring from the threat to my inner peace and well-being brought on by the anxiety which I impose unconsciously on the situation .
15 These accusations may be wholly untrue but they will be made to an extent not paralleled by criticism of any judgment he may make from the bench of the regular courts .
16 This also highlights the way in which a court may choose from a number of doctrines in coming to a solution .
17 A tank may benefit from a change of position in the event of a problem where everything else has failed .
18 Some patients may benefit from a stress management programme , while severe cases may require the multidisciplinary services of a pain clinic .
19 The duty arises from the real concern that management may benefit from an opportunity which properly belongs to the company and its shareholders .
20 Young people in training or further education may benefit from the provision of accommodation in community homes if they have no permanent home of their own .
21 Requests are often received from Doctors , Hospitals , Social Workers , or from a friend or neighbour who knows of someone who may benefit from the service .
22 In order that as many people as possible may benefit from the information please take a copy if you know of someone else who would find the booklet helpful .
23 In the odd invertebrate there is monogamy but no ordinary parental care : the limnorid isopods that bore into shipwood live in pairs , but the young look after themselves ; likewise , some wood-boring scolytid beetles live in pairs but have no parental care in the ordinary sense of the word — although the young may benefit from the proximity of their parents .
24 Expensive service organisations such as law firms or medical practices may benefit from the use of common business disciplines , but they can not succeed if they treat clients as statistics .
25 For example , non users may value the emergency cover provided in the event of a car breakdown ; may appreciate the availability of services for other household members and may benefit from the use made of services by others , for example , friends and relatives visiting them .
26 Such errors may result from a failure to identify the appropriate grapheme ( e.g. , " whose " " hows " , and " straight " " strat " ) , or a failure to segment the appropriate phoneme correctly ( e.g. , " except " " exersept " , and " vehicle " " vercal " ) .
27 Thus , dominance can be seen to arise where a firm has the power to behave independently of its competitors and customers , and this may result from a combination of a number of factors , none of which separately would necessarily imply dominance ( e.g. United Brands case ) .
28 Jack Cowan , working at the California Institute of Technology , Pasadena , California , thinks that at least part of the hallucinogenic experience may result from an instability of neural activity in the visual cortex .
29 Depression may result from an upbringing which induced feelings of insecurity , inadequacy or false guilt which have dogged the young adult 's steps until they finally come to a head during the crisis of midlife .
30 The high number of ichneumonid species , none of them common , may result from the patchiness of the garden habitat , as each exploits a different niche .
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