Example sentences of "might [be] [vb pp] that [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 For example , it might be decided that the words savage and Negro should be replaced by some other terms in every definition in which they occur .
2 Of course , it might be said that a man in your position , if you 'll forgive the expression , is dieting either because his lover has threatened to leave him if he does n't shed a few pounds or because his lover has left him and he feels a need to , shall we say , freshen up .
3 Indeed , it might be said that a set of standard terms requires greater care because it will be used for a large number of separate transactions , possibly involving a wide range of goods and/or parties .
4 This is not wholly satisfactory reconciliation , since it might be said that a supermarket consents to customers taking goods from its shelves only when they honestly intend to pay and not otherwise .
5 This is not a wholly satisfactory reconciliation , since it might be said that a supermarket consents to customers taking goods from its shelves only when they honestly intend to pay and not otherwise .
6 This is not a wholly satisfactory reconciliation , since it might be said that a supermarket consents to customers taking goods from its shelves only when they honestly intend to pay and not otherwise . "
7 It might be said that the reformulation in [ 13b ] is simply a more theoretical version of the more concrete description of style in [ 13a ] .
8 It might be said that the museum was Mrs Gardner 's revenge ; Fenway Court , the remarkable Italian palazzo which she built well outside respectable Boston among the city 's breweries and distilleries , was named by her The Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum .
9 ( In fact , it might be said that the use of torture in the ‘ civilised ’ world today is more widespread and certainly much more sophisticated than was the case in the ‘ barbaric ’ Middle Ages . )
10 Alternatively , it might be said that the talk about words conveying ideas it not to be taken seriously .
11 On a pure labour law test , on the other hand , it might be said that the fact that the employees were doing the same kind of work on the same machines should be enough to amount to a transfer of a business .
12 For those that understand such terminology it might be said that the remedies work at the level of energy and not of matter .
13 It might be said that the analogy between policemen and scientists is incorrect because , while a scientist engages in experiment in order to test a pre-existing hypothesis , a policeman approaches an investigation with an open mind and is , therefore , not vulnerable to bias .
14 It might be argued that the test procedure is thus shown to be at fault , since in all the above cases the first element can be shown to have a clear semantic function relative to the second element : in fact , it signals a sub-variety of the general category denoted by the second element .
15 It might be argued that the actions were outside the express authority of the Council , for there could be no express authority to incur debts that could not be honoured .
16 though David Holbrook ( 1973 ) , for one , would not agree — are the Narnia books of C.S. Lewis , but it might be argued that the story told allegorically in The lion , the witch and the wardrobe was told much more successfully in The Bible .
17 It might be argued that the Algerians hardly present a severe test .
18 Nevertheless , it might be argued that the problem of particular identity , at least as far as perceptual things are concerned , presents no insoluble problems .
19 While there are some aspects of the redraft where it might be argued that the law has not been accurately expressed , there is no doubt that both its language and typography suggest that there are considerable improvements which could be made to the present drafting and printing of statutes in the UK .
20 In retrospect , it might be argued that the significance of the liquidity trap was over-emphasised .
21 It might be argued that the courts have a role to play in ensuring that groups which have been unfairly denied access to the policy-making arena or who have a genuine complaint about how that process was conducted , should be allowed to challenge the outcome of that process in the courts .
22 It might be argued that the supply of components to factories on a ‘ just-in-time ’ basis might prompt adjacent location in a linked region of manufacturing , but , from reports to date , this does not have to follow .
23 ‘ Fade ’ is a pharmacological phenomenon in which the response of a steady state system to a given stimulus decreases with time ; thus it might be argued that the cigarette smoking had no effect and that the observed reduction in secretion simply coincided with system fade .
24 For those who might be disturbed that the ambience of ‘ live ’ recordings is in appropriate for music of such delicacy , I 'm happy to report that audience noise is minimal .
25 It might be imagined that an individual with a ‘ lark'-like clock but an ‘ owl'-like life-style or vice versa would have difficulties .
26 Thirdly , the criticism might be made that the distinction I earlier drew ( in the section on ‘ Autonomy ’ ) — between someone voluntarily being treated as a means to the satisfaction of another 's needs , and their being treated as a means to the satisfaction of another 's desires — is not adequate here .
27 As an example , it might be claimed that in ‘ hutch ’ was different ( perhaps in having shorter duration ) from in ‘ hush ’ or ‘ Welsh ’ , ; or it might be claimed that the place of articulation of in ‘ watch apes ’ is different from that of in ‘ what shapes ’ .
28 It might be objected that the doubleness is just a trick of Porfiry 's .
29 It might be expected that the percentage thinking that health had improved since their parents ' time would increase with age .
30 At the rime of bringing up a young family it might be expected that the woman 's role would be primarily in the home .
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