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

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1 you know you might you might catch the same person twice
2 It might feel the same way again , ’ one diplomat pointed out .
3 Real owners might do the same thing but perhaps end up in a Relais & Chateaux hotel rather than the Place d'Italie .
4 By contrast , neither party has any desire to suggest that men might do the same thing .
5 He said he instantly dismissed Miss Dixon after she displayed a hostile attitude and claimed she might do the same thing again .
6 They might render the same exchange like this :
7 If the family allegiance to a particular sect changed then the whole local membership might follow the same path .
8 The labels parents attach to particular behaviour patterns often reflect this : thus one set of parents may see a grossly inactive baby as ‘ placid ’ and happily accept him as that , while another set might see the same child as irritatingly ‘ lazy ’ and accordingly try to force him to behave differently .
9 Different records might call the same man husbandman and yeoman , but as he progressed , the latter description would be used with increasing consistency .
10 Ca n't we at least suppose that we might have the same experience on the Sun ? ’
11 Ca n't we at least suppose that we might have the same experience on the Sun ? ’
12 The first is a highly fortuitous and austere way : namely that the compound might have the same effect — the transfer of some particular kind of information — sufficiently often and sufficiently advantageously for there to be some selective advantage in its coming standardly to possess that significance : that is , for it to acquire the biological function of transmitting just that kind of information .
13 The immediate impulse was the prospect which arose in the 1830s that Canada might go the same way of rebellion as the American colonies .
14 And I guess my mother thought I might go the same way .
15 The rest of us might put the same thing in much more simple terms by voicing that popular complaint , ‘ When you 've eaten a Chinese meal you feel hungry again in a couple of hours . ’
16 I 've told her dad to sit because people might get the same thing .
17 It was left to another distinguished scientist , Sir Henry Tizard , to suggest that the British — puffing themselves up like the frog in Aesop 's fable — might suffer the same fate .
18 How could you love a child who , because of its strangeness and deformity , precluded you from having a child of your own because it might bear the same strangeness and deformity ?
19 However , we might find the same relationship among all sections of society by 2006 ; breaking unjust laws might become the hallmark of the less educated of all ages .
20 ‘ I might ask the same thing of you … ’
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