Example sentences of "might [be] [adv] [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 Might I suggest that one of the empty commercial properties in Woodbridge might be well suited to such a venture ?
2 There will be no compromise between safety and commercial motivation , but occasionally the divulging of information might be commercially damaging to the business involved .
3 The significance of the results extends beyond Unzen , as it reinforces a volume-composition pattern found across the western United States , and suggests that Nd-isotope tracers might be generally applied to continental effusive volcanism in the effort to minimize volcanic hazards .
4 There are a number of men only too anxious to buy themselves a knighthood who might be most attracted to a project that catches the public sympathy . ’
5 Perhaps some consideration might be additionally given to the current situation regarding the lack of protection for the current situation regarding the lack of protection for the interiors of unlisted buildings within conservation areas … ’
6 Tantrums may be best suited to a ‘ duration ’ type measurement ( how long each one lasts ) while swearing might be best suited to ‘ frequency ’ type measurement ( how often it occurs ) .
7 Provisional PFGE data had indicated that sequences from KOX ZNF gene cluster A might be physically linked to the ZNF25 ( KOX19 ) gene ( L.Papi et al. , unpublished data ) .
8 There is some limited evidence that the administrative model might be more suited to the needs of people with a physical disability ( Pilling , 1988 ) whereas people with mental illness may find the administrative model unacceptable and less effective ( Huxley and Warner , 1992 ) .
9 ‘ He might be only pretending to be gaga , ’ said Pooley .
10 There is an irony in the unverifiability of Shils 's theory which might be fairly condensed to ‘ Who says society says integration ’ .
11 The full implications of quantum mechanics , if discussed in classrooms , might be highly threatening to traditional methods of teaching physics .
12 Second , there will be a border area where the two interpretations merge , in the sense that certain particular values for adjective and noun meanings , when joined in an attributive combination , will under either interpretation always correspond to identical external situations ; hence even highly sophisticated investigators might be hard put to it to tell whether a given adjective is simply applicable to X or has as its value having the property of being-related-to-X .
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