Example sentences of "may [vb infin] received " in BNC.

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1 Readers may have received mail shots with the Barclaycard logo suggesting that they stand a good chance of winning a six figure sum of money and a car in a prize draw .
2 Do not count any earnings your employee may have received from other employment .
3 Conan suggests that Australia may have received £550 million from Britain in the period 1945–51 , South Africa perhaps £400 million over the same period .
4 As a result , Mr Nicholson himself may have received more than $50m .
5 They may have received some college training , participated in in-service training provided by government agencies or employers , or received no specific training for their jobs .
6 Be sure to understand their needs and aspirations and counterbalance any pessimistic reports they may have received about the church 's condition and the cost of repair .
7 He may have received psychotherapy , but has not yet undergone conversion surgery even if he is contemplating it .
8 For although the chairman of the University Grants Committee , Edward Parkes , may have received his well-earned knighthood at the end of the year — in a batch meanly thin , as usual , on honours for the scientific community — many of the nation 's academics will never see their profession in the same rosy light .
9 You may have received a letter from them early in 1984 asking for up to date details .
10 These are the DSS minimum contributions including the value of the special 2 per cent incentive payment and tax relief you may have received — together with their accumulated investment growth .
11 Some estates may have received new owners with little change , or they could have been divided and redistributed ; others may have been enlarged with the addition of adjacent lands or groups of estates under a single owner .
12 You may have received a letter where the letters p.p. are written before the signature of the sender .
13 On the other hand , States may have received representations from a number of groups of individuals whose concerns may conflict , and the traditional theory of State responsibility allows the State to synthesise or ignore those arguments and to present the position that best represents its own interests .
14 Under the STV as well as in an exhaustive ballot a candidate doomed to exclusion may have received a number of votes that is substantial and only marginally smaller than the number received by the candidate next above him in the relevant count .
15 Ecgberht may have received wide support in Kent and can not necessarily be regarded as wholly dependent on Offa for his kingship .
16 The provisions made by his executors to establish loan chests at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge after his death suggest that Gilbert may have received some sort of university education .
17 By the late 1930s any money he may have received from his father had come to an end .
18 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
19 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
20 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
21 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
22 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
23 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
24 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
25 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
26 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
27 You may have received this leaflet directly from a solicitor .
28 Gundobad fled to Avignon , where he may have received Visigothic support .
29 Section 33(3) requires the court to have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to : ( a ) the length of , and the reasons for , the delay on the part of the plaintiff ; ( b ) the extent to which , having regard to the delay , the evidence adduced or likely to be adduced by the plaintiff or the defendant is or is likely to be less cogent than if the action had been brought within the time allowed by s11 or ( as the case may be ) by s12 ; ( c ) the conduct of the defendant after the cause of action arose , including the extent ( if any ) to which he responded to requests reasonably made by the plaintiff for information or inspection for the purpose of ascertaining facts which were or might be relevant to the plaintiff 's cause of action against the defendant ; ( d ) the duration of any disability of the plaintiff arising after the date of the accrual of the cause of action ; ( e ) the extent to which the plaintiff acted promptly and reasonably once he knew whether or not the act or omission of the defendant , to which the injury was attributable , might be capable at that time of giving rise to an action for damages ; ( f ) the steps , if any , taken by the plaintiff to obtain medical , legal or other expert advice and the nature of any such advice he may have received .
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