Example sentences of "might then [be] " in BNC.

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1 The dogs might then been associated with a Phoenician temple , although Stager admits he does not know the name of the deity or the location of the temple .
2 Mr Cohen suggested the company might then be worth £500m .
3 It might then be possible to piece the photographs together and ‘ play ’ them with a photo-electric cell .
4 Going ahead with Sizewell might then be a marginally attractive proposition on economic grounds though given the risks I have already referred to the case would hardly be overwhelming .
5 Promising substances might then be put on a provisional list .
6 And how much more attractive the area might then be to potential investor industrialists who appreciate the value of air travel ?
7 Modules might then be designed which deal separately with each question but which have elements in common in respect to underlying aspects of appraisal .
8 A calculation of the profit and loss account balance brought forward might then be performed and added to the retained profit to arrive at the carried forward balance .
9 It might then be possible to begin to analyse the boundaries , alignments and the power in the family drawing on the work of Minuchin ( 1981 ) .
10 The ‘ payoff matrix ’ might then be
11 It is important to appreciate its complexity for we might then be less likely to generalise its demands , or the way we decide between them , on the basis of the ( by now familiar ) too narrow diet of examples .
12 We might then be able to work back from lifestyle and abilities to predict what the brain of a particular species should be like ( Legg 1983 ) .
13 Perhaps we might then be concerned with issues such as the relative merits of explanations that appeal to behavioural drives and those that appeal to ideological struc-tures ; but the problem of holism as we now know it would simply not exist .
14 It might then be a good time to look at the original sources of stress which created these symptoms in the first place .
15 The client might then be asked to close their eyes and visualise how they might respond differently , or to role play the new behaviour with the therapist .
16 It might then be the ‘ painting of Limbo ’ which Mantegna is recorded as working on for Ludovico Gonzaga in a document of 1468 .
17 He might then be open to bitter objections from many adults .
18 A high preponderance of Protestant ascetics might then be suggestive .
19 In these instances you might then be able to offer more successful therapy than pure beta blockers .
20 It might then be claimed that such a form of the text was incomplete or inadequate , because the point which the author wishes to make is no longer accessible from the written text .
21 You might then be asked any of the following questions :
22 Held , granting the declarations , that it was the moment of adjudication of bankruptcy that caused the property of a bankrupt to vest in his trustee thereby causing an involuntary alienation of his property which resulted in the severance of any joint tenancy he might then be beneficially entitled to ; that the combined effect of sections 37(1) and 38 ( a ) of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 was not to vest title in the trustee retrospectively but rather to vest in the trustee when adjudication occurred title to property which was identified by reference to the property which belonged to the bankrupt at the commencement of the bankruptcy ; and that , accordingly , since the joint tenancy had not been severed before the wife 's death , on her death the husband , as survivor , became entitled to the whole beneficial interest in the properties , which on his adjudication as bankrupt vested in his trustee in bankruptcy ( post , pp. 206A , F–H , 207C ) .
23 It might then be tempting to pass straight to this later type of analysis , of the newspaper office , the publishing combine , the broadcasting company , the film corporation ; indeed such work is necessary .
24 This might then be used when necessary , but be left empty in other cases .
25 Research might then be seen to be a mere luxury add-on , not an essential part of ‘ what it is to be an institution of higher education .
26 A random sample of this strata might then be carried out .
27 A random sample of the clustered strata might then be carried out .
28 The risk of injury might become so great that the timid fighters , which never get hurt because they always run away first , might then be at an advantage .
29 ‘ Scramble ’ might then be a better position to hold than ‘ Pursue ’ .
30 Overall institutional allocations might then be fine tuned ( there was a process initially called ‘ mitigation ’ which protected traditionally high cost institutions from the full force of change ) and there are other criteria to meet such as targets for sub-degree , part-time and mature intakes ; but this distribution of packets of money by students identified with subject areas remains the basis of the system .
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