Example sentences of "might be [vb pp] from [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He also suggested that a government might be formed from a coalition of post-Solidarity parties which would choose their own leadership .
2 The rearmost sections of the leading edges might be detached from the joining ferrules .
3 Waste paper might be obtained from a friendly printer .
4 The research aims to establish just how such ‘ gains ’ might be generated from the commercial development of land by looking at the roles of , relationships between , public and private interests in shaping the development process .
5 Since there are no authenticated figures showing the costs of running the lift , some idea might be gained from the records of running costs of the Anderton Lift .
6 Our study was designed to investigate whether evening primrose oil was effective in AD , and whether any additional response might be gained from the simultaneous administration of fish oil .
7 Yet , as might be gathered from the secret nature of the procedures , none of this has any formal parliamentary approval , and there is no formal parliamentary accountability or scrutiny of these rather sinister developments .
8 They were confident , despite predictions by some eminent scientists , that the manned bomber would prove superior to any cruise or ballistic missile that might be developed from the German wartime V-1 ( Flying Bomb ) or V-2 ( Ballistic Missile ) .
9 As might be guessed from the nature of the Saxons and their land , Charles was soon forced to return and re-establish his supremacy .
10 Coveney argues that evidence for viewing such examples as alternants might be adduced from the linguistic behaviour of speakers , citing as an example the following incident where he heard a Frenchwoman asking a younger man the following question , using an [ SVQ ] variant : ‘ Tu es d'où ? ’
11 And I hope that , and indeed the point about the , the er , what might be added from the environmental strategy into the structured plan , which Mr made .
12 There were also considerable unexplained amounts being paid into his bank account that the inspector thought might be derived from the company .
13 There are several possible ways of administering tests which might be derived from the Cockcroft Committee 's recommendations .
14 To change to a process of programme budgeting might imply the unwelcome potential for larger annual budget shifts in priority than might be derived from the traditional line-item budget process .
15 Will my hon. Friend tell us what action is being taken to improve the position in respect of new staff and new facilities and any benefits that might be derived from the new contractual arrangements ?
16 She had already gathered that her new employer was extremely well connected and , as might be expected from a woman of her standing , required absolute discretion of her staff and the encouragement of her children in a properly modest attitude to the family 's privileged position .
17 ‘ That the architect of the ‘ cheerful ’ Cemetery Chapel at Woking [ Tite ] should bear a grudge against the architect of St. Giles 's , Camberwell , [ Scott ] is , perhaps , no more than might be expected from a spirit of professional rivalry degenerated into envy . ’
18 Hustle the Panda along your average back road and you 'll find none of the woolliness that might be expected from a car of this price range .
19 The obvious reluctance of many in the rural sector to seek work in the industrial sector , even on a temporary basis , points to an inclination to stay put far beyond what might be expected from a natural conservatism and apprehension of the unknown .
20 Like the army officers , the writer attempted to justify the recruitment practices of the Guards , and , as might be expected from a serious organ of right-wing opinion , more ingenuity was shown in the search for justificatory reasons than was by the lower-ranking quoted officers .
21 Marulić also wrote in Latin , as might be expected from a man who had studied in Padua .
22 It is believed that the benefits will go beyond what might be expected from a ‘ low profile ’ introduction of engineering measures .
23 Polymer samples are normally polydisperse and it is of interest to examine the type of average molecular weight that might be expected from a measurement of *lsqb ; η ] .
24 This is serious stuff , as might be expected from an American editor who writes Bob Dylan reference books , but there are enough gems to counterbalance the struggle to forge a rock aesthetic .
25 Uvedale Price objects in 1810 to villages like Nuneham Courtenay ( Fig. 23a ) on aesthetic grounds , as might be expected from an advocate of the picturesque : ‘ Such a methodical arrangement saves all further thought and invention ; but it is hardly necessary to say that nothing can be more formal and insipid . ’
26 There was little in the way of negotiation or managed change of the sort which might be expected from the Cockburn model .
27 As might be expected from the above , the most extensive changes to be made were in procedures for recording audit work .
28 As might be expected from the study of mortality data acute health problems are not equally distributed throughout the population .
29 We want to know precisely what funds the trust handles , where those funds are , and what regular income might be expected from the capital sum . ’
30 Migration ( Figure 4.5B ) has played the key role in these growth patterns — indeed , to a greater extent than might be expected from the overall rates of population change , because it is also compensating for substantial natural decrease in some of the fastest growing counties , principally those noted as retirement areas like East and West Sussex , the Isle of Wight , Dorset and Devon ( Figure 4.5A ) .
  Next page