Example sentences of "might [adv] be [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 As he went to the net , he raised one finger in the air as if to acknowledge the banners that proclaimed him No 1 — he might not be but the way he played last night he could be again soon .
2 but you had a eight to finish with which is finishing and a one , two , three might not be and a better run so I think I would have been tempted to finish with the ace flush there try and stop me rather than trying to win it cos you had nothing else did you ?
3 If you take photographs as a hobby , you are likely to have produced at least one quality snap in your time and it might just be that a magazine would find it useful .
4 It might just be that the best way forward in Africa is by falling back on the spirit of silif , and building on it .
5 It might simply be that the amount of learning involved in such a task was not great enough to generate biochemical changes big enough to be measured .
6 It might even be that the whole of our galaxy was required .
7 It might even be that the very military orderliness with which the Germans performed their mining affairs could have resulted in alienation .
8 It might well be that the researcher decided to start inside the home with individual activities , and lead on to collective ones .
9 Held , allowing the appeal , the problem was considered in Mann ( 1972 ) 56 Cr.App.R. 750 where Lord Widgery C.J. had said that if an accused remained silent in response to every question it might well be that the evidence of the onesided dialogue should not be admitted .
10 Thus though it might well be that the very short-term phases of memory are dependent on the continued electrical activity of the brain — and there will be more to be said about this in due course — in the longer term any persistent record or trace must demand some more permanent incarnation .
11 For these reasons , it might well be that the courts will be reluctant to interfere with the judgment of the policeman on the spot , especially if he is an experienced officer .
12 In certain cases it might well be that the defendant 's ignorance will not help him .
13 But it might well be that an associatively activated X is simply not salient enough to produce effects of a measurable size .
14 If the prosecutor were required to prove that the assailant knew or was reckless about the question whether his victim was a policeman , it might occasionally be that the assailant would escape conviction of the section 51 charge .
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