Example sentences of "might [verb] about the " in BNC.

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1 Despite these qualifications from those immediately concerned , a live studio discussion was interpolated after the second , with three practitioners of the orthodox — Ian McColl , professor of surgery at Guy 's , Professor T. J. McElwaine , of the Royal Marsden , and Dr Walter Bodmer , director of research for the Imperial Cancer Fund — being ranged against , though they might demur about the word ‘ against ’ , Barbara Kidman , a broadcaster , journalist , cancer sufferer and author of a book on the alternative approach : and Dr Dick Richards , a physician and author .
2 WHATEVER anyone might think about the amazing Norman Lamont saga , everyone will be agreed on one point : How can lawyers run up a Pounds 23,000 bill so simply ?
3 Whatever one might think about the virtues or otherwise of nuclear energy , clearly it is a viable source of base load electricity for the future .
4 Killing then might be regarded as a moral duty in certain circumstances in spite of the instinctive horror we might feel about the destruction of living beings .
5 Whatever the gentleman in question might feel about the Hanoverian monarchy and the Jacobite cause he could , in the circumstances , hardly refuse to take the oaths to Government and cast his vote for his friend in a subsequent election .
6 Even though glowing reports of fund raising efforts will have some public relations spin-off they are unlikely to overcome any serious doubts the local community might have about the school .
7 It is always wise for the counsellor to be aware of any possible worries that the counsellee might have about the meeting , and have ready some words of reassurance about the purpose of their meeting .
8 In order to do so , the counsellor may have to ‘ unlearn ’ some of the more conventional understandings she or he might have about the nature of the war .
9 A member of the Guild is always present to answer any questions you might have about the items on display .
10 Since they may be determined in a way favourable to the defendant , there is no need to decide any other complaints he might have about the conduct of his trial .
11 His nickname , his flattened nose , a crossed scar like an emblem beside one eyebrow had all been won honourably , in and out of the ring , and whatever suspicions he might have about the feelings — even about the suitability for the present assignment — of Denis Hurley , sitting back-to-back with him on the cart , he knew that he would be man enough for anything , his nerve would not fail .
12 Er I mean that goes back again to the articles which you might have about the way that parents talk to their children , and you quite often find that then very very quickly the children grow up speaking in a same way as the parent of that sex talked to the them .
13 Superintendent Mercer had selected his two sergeants with an eye to contrast or , perhaps , with a view to satisfying any prejudices which Dalgliesh might harbour about the age and experience of his subordinates .
14 By the middle of January 1937 , he had spoken to Mairet , and he gave the impression that anything he might write about the crisis in the New English Weekly would be done with some reluctance , not least because he was extremely busy .
15 The papers might talk about the swinging sixties but the nearest most girls of Maura 's age got to it was in the clothes they wore .
16 Mosley might talk about the BUF 's racial tolerance as long as he wished .
17 There were other circumstances , too , in which men might travel about the country ; knights and their retinues would go to war , merchants would pursue trade and pilgrims would travel to shrines .
18 For all that we might say about the relevance of performance indicators in financial reporting , a fundamental and seemingly intractable problem remains : performance can not be judged in terms of output alone , economy , efficiency and effectiveness must be judged together .
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