Example sentences of "might [vb infin] in the " in BNC.

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1 On this basis , over 600 jobs might disappear in the longer term . ’
2 While not representing a complete list of provisions these sections map out the range of professional social work services which should become available at the local level to deal comprehensively with difficulties that might arise in the life of a young person .
3 What problems might arise in the future ?
4 It was foreseen that difficult situations might arise in the operation of such a scheme , for example two elderly dementia sufferers could live next door to one another , one able to receive support from the action project and the other not .
5 Yet Martha was a woman of courage , and she succeeded nobly in satisfying her hungry lodgers with wholesome fare , and spreading for them sheets a prince might fold around him ; and though the body was often weak , the spirit was lively , and soon found a way whereby to mount with ease over any difficulty that might arise in the government of her household or the entertainment of her hospices .
6 ( The items might be set on a particular occasion as a test of the attainment of the criterion or they might arise in the context of more holistic tasks on separate occasions . )
7 A reference was also necessary since it was possible that a similar case might arise in the public sector of employment where the Directive would have direct effect .
8 Declare to HCIMA any conflict of interest which might arise in the course of representing the Association .
9 The RICS check each lease to make sure there is a power of appointment ; other than that , the president did not consider it his function to determine any legal questions which might arise in the course of a rent review .
10 In terms of television these conflicts might arise in the deployment of outside broadcast units .
11 I had hoped he and I might snuggle in the back of the car while his mate did the driving .
12 v. Perry , 1987 F.L.R. 237 the court had to consider circumstances which differed from those in the present case and in Coldunell Ltd. v. Gallon in that a responsible official of the creditor bank took it upon himself to discharge any duty that might exist in the circumstances by personally dealing with the wife when she executed the documents under attack .
13 ‘ It 's all activity oriented contact which is a beginning to help to alter the preconceived ideas that might exist in the minds of the local community .
14 ‘ If there was somewhere you might stay in the meanwhile , I may shortly be in a position to help you . ’
15 This will be followed by a look at some of the broader possible implications of fairness , and the way in which that term might aid in the development of procedural forms other than classical adjudication .
16 where you might think in the centre of France .
17 More remarkable still , in 1907 Pius X instructed Catholics to give assent not only to what the Biblical Commission had already decided , but to all decisions that it might make in the future .
18 Why , said Pumlumon , had n't there been a time , not so very long ago either , when he could rattle off the words that set the Draoicht Suan working with no more ado than you might make in the squashing of a flea , always supposing you wanted to do something so pointless , which Pumlumon himself never had .
19 These are likely to be self-serving , but , in Berle and Means ' view , the possibility is also opened up that rather than furthering their own interests , or those of the shareholders as currently required by law , management might act in the interests of society as a whole , evolving into a ‘ purely neutral technocracy balancing a variety of claims by various groups in the community and assigning to each a portion of the income stream on the basis of public policy rather than private cupidity ’ .
20 Isolated individuals are less likely to flourish even though they might survive in the aquarium .
21 Such simulations , based on observed system behaviour , can tell us how things might have been if we are looking at unrepeatable , past , events or how the system might behave in the future , if the transition probabilities remain unaltered .
22 The object of the study is to provide some answers to such questions and to identify specific measures which might assist in the achievement of certain national goals , such as preventing further loss of broadleaved woods .
23 He used a tiff with France as an excuse for military preparations he might need in the east .
24 The truth of these assumptions — that Britain is a particularly regulated economy where enterprise might flourish in the wake of decontrol — is by no means held universally .
25 The high figure from the farm was due to government support and this might fall in the near future .
26 He comforted himself with the saying of Uncle Jan — ‘ the devil is never so black as he is painted ’ — and dreamed of what he might accomplish in the company of such a woman , in collaboration with her soft femaleness .
27 The airways are clear , but it might lodge in the oesophagus . ’
28 I might jump in the lake , I do n't really know .
29 At the same time , he was entering with a new singleness of purpose the creative landscape of his own mind , and sensed already that what he might achieve in the months ahead would surpass anything which had resulted from two very public years in Bristol .
30 Regardless of what Nick Popplewell and he might achieve in the months ahead with the Lions last Saturday will never leave him .
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