Example sentences of "we may [adv] find " in BNC.

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1 Wrangham comments : ‘ We may thus find the first evidence that so-called abnormal sexual behaviour may have a biological function ’ ; but he points out that a number of issues need to be resolved .
2 ‘ Yes , a pattern , of course we may not find it at once — ’
3 ‘ There are times when we may not find each other attractive . ’
4 We may surely find her a place .
5 find their healing rather than bringing the remedy to the person , and we may again find healing in the landscape by tending and restoring old clumps .
6 We may yet find ourselves fighting a war on three fronts , and all one war . ’
7 We may also find that more and more top management jobs in big companies are filled by hiring people away from smaller companies .
8 Diane , I believe that if I place this disc onto the rotating turntable of a hi-fi system — not forgetting to place the stylus onto the groove , of course — then we may just find the break we 're looking for …
9 Diane , I believe that if I place this disc onto the rotating turntable of a hi-fi system — not forgetting to place the stylus onto the groove , of course — then we may just find the break we 're looking for …
10 We may well find that what we are saying comes to others as God 's word with prophetic power , as it has already so come to us .
11 I think we may well find your daughter now . ’
12 We may well find it significant that there is no evidence during this period of any attempt on his part to acquaint himself with Wagner 's own voluminous theoretical prose .
13 If the forms of the two potential functions are similar too , we may well find that the ground-state level for the ion lies almost exactly over that for the molecule in the energy diagram ( Fig. 6.13 ) .
14 We may still find our attention distracted by thoughts of home , family or whatever .
15 Of course , much music has been composed using only scale and chord patterns , and if they have rhythmic distinction we may still find them useful .
16 Evil men can be fully qualified and have resources at their command , so we may still find that we have evil to contend with .
17 We may indeed find the great house still standing tidily in a timbered park : but it is occupied by what the villagers describe detachedly as ‘ the atom men ’ , something remote from the rest of us , though not remote in the sense they themselves like to think .
18 Thus the gist of Spinoza 's argument , for example , is that whereas in ordinary circumstances we may indeed find it useful and necessary to distinguish between essential and accidental properties , metaphysically such a distinction can not be upheld .
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