Example sentences of "[pron] you might have " in BNC.

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1 Did you never have someone you might have married ?
2 The Word of God records the words of the Lord Jesus Christ in John chapter 16 verse 33 when He said ‘ These things I have spoken unto you , that IN ME YE MIGHT HAVE PEACE . ’
3 So , European traditions were a sort of net in which you might have got caught ?
4 Another aspect of organisations which you might have discovered is that organisations are constantly changing .
5 It 's also worth applying for other jobs that appeal and for which you might have a chance .
6 Er I mean that goes back again to the articles which you might have about the way that parents talk to their children , and you quite often find that then very very quickly the children grow up speaking in a same way as the parent of that sex talked to the them .
7 Which you might have already had actually , but it did say insert three .
8 And so for each one of them you might 've started by , having got all this , what you could do then is write for each individual element , a tank base , a tank wall a bedroom or a bathroom , you can produce , I would suggest , a little bar chart which might look like that , for one unit .
9 In relation to the concept of a new settlement the Department very firmly has an open mind at a time , we 've heard many statements drawing on the various P P G s , and from some of them you might have been excused for thinking that the Department had indeed turned it turned its back on the idea of a n new settlements , knowing that sort of situation we felt it appropriate before the start of this examination to sound out the residents of two Marscham Street
10 The other group of people who you might have thought , ought to have taken them up and been interested in them , was the wider field of social science , er , writers after all , social scientists , ought to be interested in these , in these books because they 're about social science .
11 ‘ I think maybe the reason he is n't speaking to me , ’ Ellie ventured , ‘ is something you might have said to him . ’
12 It suddenly seemed important to keep the conversation as close as possible to something you might have read in an old book .
13 you know , can you think of one you might 've had last night or one that you particularly remember or something like that
14 To ‘ catch ’ it you might have to slow down and let it come towards you .
15 If you half-closed your eyes and looked at it you might have likened it to a string of coloured beads .
16 And it it it 's called the fog index but the thing that 's interesting about it is that I 've got , I 've got some interesting examples of fog indexes erm and you 'll get people like Churchill who sometimes made speeches and their fog index is quite small you 're going to use this you know example and they might have a fog , fog index that 's fine and what Anne and I are talking about with say something like the Telegraph or the Times or whatever , might have a fog index that people but this is because Churchill was very clear , very concise and going back to the original point about , or some of the original points about this , and I was mak raising these issues earlier this evening one of the great sadnesses that I have is that , is that when I first went into journalism the tabloids as we call them were incredibly well written beautifully styled , well researched and okay they might have been punchier and shorter and everything else , compared to the turning up the er the , the Times or whatever , but they were well written and you might have had , if you can put the fog index test , test on it you might have had a fog index of say six or seven compared to eleven on the Telegraph story , but it was still full of clarity like to read .
17 But , like , you do n't know what you might have prevented ’ ( FN 20/6/87 , p. 8 ) .
18 ‘ Because of what you might have remembered since . ’
19 Minter would n't have paid you a penny for what you might have got out of me .
20 Who knows what you might have got if you 'd played your hand right ? ’
21 ( 6 ) An empathetic question asks the pupil to become involved personally with the evidence , e.g. " If you had been the soldier standing behind Harold , say what you might have thought , felt and done at the moment the arrow hit him in the eye . "
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