Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] might have a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 so I might have a couple of days off and then I can be with Laddie and take him for walks and everything
2 So you might have a stand
3 Perhaps we might have a look at things , at this stage , through the eyes of young Benjamin Titford , the youngest surviving son , left motherless at nine years old ; waving his big brother William Charles goodbye as he set off for London soon afterwards ; watching brother John cough himself into an early grave ; listening to endless conversations about high prices , shortages , and a war across the channel ; dragged out of his bed in the middle of the night to cries of ‘ Fire ! ’ and ‘ Flood ! ’ ; struggling to keep warm every winter ; watching his father die of a long illness — these experiences made his childhood , in modern terms , an awful , albeit a dramatic one .
4 No , but like she might have a minute while she 's having her din , the they 're really busy you know in there !
5 Yeah well she might have a paper one .
6 Then I might have a chance of winning , at least for a week or two .
7 But then I might have a passenger whose company I am enjoying and do not want the intrusion .
8 Sometimes you might have a vision for an entire song and sometimes the vision is just for a particular part that relates to the next particular part . ’
9 Not yet no , just get your out there and and then you might have a bit of lee-way might not we then ?
10 If we pursue the last option then we might have a job proving that we have made a successful descent but at least it would then truly become a purely personal outing in a boat .
11 We go on a Vaporetto to view the studio where I might have a class next year .
12 Otherwise you might have a bulge showing .
13 There was talk before the start of the competition having become more intense ; of the gap between McLaren and the rest having been reduced to the point where we might have a race on our hands .
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