Example sentences of "quite possible that [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is quite possible that no damage at all will result , and there is probably no risk at all of any personal injury .
2 It is quite possible that a number of other political changes would have got under way more recently were it not for the direct intervention of Pope John Paul II and the Vatican .
3 It is quite possible that the legislation enacted to give effect to the decision ( the Interception of Communications Act 1985 ) will be the subject of another application under the Convention .
4 ‘ It is quite possible that the corridor could fill with smoke without the detectors knowing , ’ Burray said .
5 It is quite possible that the expansion of the social services may have used up some of the labour that could have been absorbed by the manufacturing sector but there was no scarcity of labour as such in the 1960s and 1970s .
6 It is , for instance , quite possible that the grain found on this particular estate by the royal surveyors was what was left after the deduction of food-distributions to slaves and other dependents .
7 It is quite possible that the power of water to influence the structure of biological forms is much greater than is commonly realized .
8 It is quite possible that the economy may converge to a steady state not characterized by equilibrium , e.g. , where capital and the labour force are growing at the same rate , but there is a constant level of unemployment .
9 Despite the difficulty of imagining how a behaviour involving the three components outlined in the last paragraph could arise in the first place , I think it is quite possible that the explanation of stable age queues in animals may be of this kind .
10 It was quite possible that the killer had come and gone by car .
11 It is quite possible that the extent of unmet legal need can never be ascertained and that which can be ascertained can not adequately be explained .
12 But it is quite possible that the programme could go ahead at some point , and it would be comparatively cheap .
13 It is , therefore , quite possible that the tenant is still in occupation of the demised property two or more years after his tenancy was expressed to expire .
14 More sensibly , it is quite possible that the manager is not earning returns as high as shareholders would like , yet that because it is costly for shareholders to gain enough additional information to improve the situation sufficiently to make it worthwhile whilst acting rationally , they appear passive .
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