Example sentences of "might [adv] see " in BNC.

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1 X/Open is in separate discussions with the UN over the organisation 's internal use of open systems , and there is speculation that X/Open 's involvement with the UN might eventually see X/Open president Geoff Morris being elected to the UN 's advisory board .
2 They are generally thought to be striking at Hipparchos not shown , an interesting but rather surprising concept ; one might rather see them as defending themselves against the bodyguard which cut them down .
3 Although there was not one single reason why Harry might suddenly see her not as a sister or friend but as a woman he might fall in love with , deep down inside she still hoped that this unlikely miracle could occur .
4 The central thesis is that " coding creates reality rather than simply reporting it " ; but to suggest that " simple reporting " is how one might normally see coding functioning in relation to reality is to presuppose a very naive view .
5 The Herald announced that Farnham people might soon see women tackling fires alongside their male comrades in the National Fire Service .
6 Within a day or two it appeared that a complete South African team would be fielded and Treviso might just see the start of rugby 's World War III .
7 If we 're very quiet we might just see a deer .
8 And you might just see me in the background of one of the shots .
9 We 've had erm , he may see at some stage , he might just see my son Christopher
10 The two cities were evidently closely linked ; and one might possibly see , in the apparent contradiction here between structure and detail , an Athenian artist 's design executed by craftsmen trained in another tradition .
11 but I think one one might still see this in terms of , of Mao 's ideas on excesses that , that clearly the situation was not right in the first half of , of nineteen forty seven .
12 You might also see gadwall , Brent geese and Bewick 's swans .
13 If , alongside this , boys are allowed to develop e.g. their caring faculties and to contemplate traditionally female careers such as nursing and social work , we might also see fewer boys taking A level mathematics and finding it unsatisfying for them , as Sheila Russell 's research ( 1983 ) indicated is all too frequently the case .
14 You might even see more elaborate devices .
15 I might even see the remainder of my old Hyundai back on my desk as a loaner while ADM irons out the inevitable bugs in this Frankenstein 's monster I 'm creating .
16 We might well see it eventually on everybody 's living room wall .
17 I hope that the hon. Gentleman had the opportunity to tell the gentleman that he might well see me in future as I shall be returning to the town in which I was born .
18 With that decision people came face to face with the expectation known to the early Christians soon after the Crucifixion and to the deeply religious who shivered at the approach of the year A.D. 1000 — the expectation that they might indeed see the end of the world in their lifetime .
19 ‘ So , ’ I said-regretfully , ‘ Filmer might indeed see the train as a target . ’
20 They are to protect other unsecured creditors who might otherwise see what 's left swallowed up by large fees . ’
21 I felt so wretched , because I thought I might never see you again .
22 They drove towards Lulling , Harrison still barking , and Agnes returned to break the dreadful news that Dorothy might never see the pair again .
23 Another friend has said that if he agrees to that he might never see them again .
24 The night wore on , the life of Winnie , who , sick with worry — I might never see him again — looked her age , all full forty years .
25 ‘ Ye might never see her again . ’
26 When he 'd left her at the entrance to Newcastle Place the day Pa died she 'd ached with disappointment that she might never see him again .
27 They might never see another amplifier again !
28 Michael 's 61-year-old widowed mother , Iris , said as another daughter , Heather , comforted her : ‘ I 'm afraid I might never see him again . ’
29 Nijaz and Sead Hukanovic had feared they might never see each other again after being parted in the savage purge of Bosnians callously dubbed ‘ ethnic cleansing ’ by the Serbs .
30 In it , she accepted that exhibitions per se are ‘ not inherently bad for the game ’ , especially if they can sometimes take top players to towns which otherwise might never see them .
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