Example sentences of "may have [verb] to [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They also look at wider issues such as their own up-bringing which may have been in an addictive family and may have led to many grief or abuse or other issues that may still need to be processed with a sponsor or a professional counsellor if there is to be further progress in recovery .
2 This may have led to some confusion and may explain why the condition , though acknowledged to be common , is not widely recognised .
3 According to the Association of Metropolitan Authorities there was a massive 37.5 per cent increase in rent arrears in the six months immediately following the benefit changes in April 1988.37 Other benefit changes may have contributed to this increase in arrears : the change from supplementary benefit to income support ; the insistence that everyone should be required to pay at least 20 per cent of their rates ( community charge ) and all of their water rates ; and the replacement of urgent needs payments by social fund loans .
4 It is uncertain to what extent British nuclear technology may have contributed to this process .
5 Abnormal hormone secretion in active coeliac disease may have contributed to these changes .
6 They face the prospect of having to accept unskilled jobs at lower wages or of retraining , in either event , they may have to move to another part of the country .
7 With no help around , you may have to resort to another tactic — a risky one : going to ground .
8 If all this fails , you may have to resort to another tactic .
9 In eighteenth-century England , for example , the practical sciences may have appealed to some dissenters because they were denied access to other professions .
10 7.6.6.1 the Term will absolutely cease but without prejudice to any rights or remedies that may have accrued to either party against the other including ( without prejudice to the generality of the above ) any right that the Tenant might have against the Landlord for a breach of the Landlord 's covenants set out in clauses 7.6.1 and 7.6.2
11 It may have occurred to some readers already .
12 He may have come to this decision in 1531 or 1532 and then proceeded cautiously because of the fear of opposition both at home and abroad .
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