Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [conj] may [verb] " in BNC.

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1 This includes harassment which will always be treated as a serious breach of the rules and may constitute gross misconduct under the disciplinary procedures .
2 The process will be contingent on existing regulation in the countries , the opportunities that may arise , and the strength of opposition to change .
3 However , he is climbing up the weights and may find this trip a shade on the short side .
4 According to this morning 's Irish Times , Dave O'Leary did n't get to play in the reserves and may have to undergo surgery on this achilles after breaking down in training yesterday .
5 1 A class of words may consist of all the words that may occupy a certain element in a structure , eg prepositions : such classes are positional classes .
6 Police believe a cheap gold-coloured bracelet found beside Robert 's body in Addlestone , Surrey , belonged to one of the killers and may help trace them .
7 They are used to ensure that the entity model will support the functions that may use the data model .
8 Because there is no overall relationship between risk ratings and recognition performance it is necessary to consider the effects that may operate within individual junctions .
9 With all the circumstances that may move :
10 Now write a description of your hand , taking the risks , following the associations that may lead nowhere but are more likely to lead exactly where you need to go .
11 Until payment of the damages , however , the plaintiff retains his property in the goods and may exercise all his rights as owner even after judgment has been given in his favour .
12 Placement costs vary according to need but are likely to involve token payment for an extra helper within the playgroups and may include transport cost and playgroup fees .
13 Many of the things that may happen to you if you are young , pregnant and choose to keep your baby , are described by the girls talking here .
14 Those are the things that may need replacing .
15 The modern way is to meet a group of patients over a party-type meal and discuss how to cope with the problems that may arise .
16 This chapter explores some of the learning opportunities provided by the ward and some of the problems that may arise .
17 Lucinda looks at many types of fences and their alternatives and gives useful tips on how to ride the different obstacles and how to deal with the problems that may arise .
18 The problems that may arise from an individual pupil 's needs must also be addressed , and possible solutions proffered .
19 Once the plaintiff has found a solicitor , the problems that may face the plaintiff in the initial stages of negotiation must be discussed .
20 The problems that may occur if gonorrhoea is left untreated can usefully be divided into those that occur locally , that is , close to the original site of infection , and those that are systemic , due to dissemination of the infection ( usually by means of the blood-stream ) throughout the body .
21 It can be dangerous for one to stay with his gun while the other returns to the task of retrieving the ferrets that may have emerged in the meantime .
22 This gives us an early warning of the pollutants that may arrive in our groundwater in the future .
23 This paper will examine these as an indicator of some of the issues that may predominate in union attempts to deal with the complex problems of technological change at work .
24 The historian Kirkpatrick was recalling an incident fourteen years earlier when he included the above in his 1751 treatise ‘ Reflections on the Causes that may retard Putrefaction of dead Bodies ’ .
25 Some water-formed features therefore , including the sand-bars that may form parallel with a shore-line with a salt-marsh behind , are constantly formed , destroyed and re-formed .
26 Strangely , this section does not mention modification of childbearing patterns among the measures that may serve this goal , while expressly stating that : " Sustained reductions in fertility have generally been preceded by reductions in mortality .
27 In examining these conflicts and changes the particular aims of the researchers are to : elucidate the changes that occurred in the UK defence science and technology system in the 1980 's and to analyse their dynamics and interactions ; ii identify and examine the assumptions about the future being made by firms and governments to guide their current decision-making in this area ; iii consider whether clear and stable structural trends are emerging , and the factors that may influence them in the 1990's , including the transition to a single European market ; iv establish a better framework for assessing contemporary developments in defence technology policy and their consequences for other areas of science and technology policy .
28 A growing number of staffs within and across schools and the specialist services are now engaged in developing such joint approaches , meeting as teams in school-based discussions and workshops , with the explicit aims of pooling their expertise , sharing and increasing their understanding of the factors that may lead or contribute to children 's learning difficulties , and finding their own most appropriate solutions to them .
29 There does not appear to have been an account taken of the of the factors that may reduce traffic on the A sixty one er and ways of ameliorating the current problems on the road which are not just a question of the volumes , but in fact the timescale it takes in fact to clear that road in the mornings .
30 It is also one of the factors that may need to be taken into account in controlling advertisements and in determining whether a discontinuance order should be made .
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