Example sentences of "well have a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | However , it is plain that the speaker of English , although he performs this general task reliably thousands of times a day , has no idea whatever how he does it , and may well have a healthy scepticism about proffered accounts in terms of linguistic or other rules . |
2 | They may well have a reflex aetiology with an afferent arc situated in the colonic wall as well as in the gastric wall — not unlike the gastrocolic reflex . |
3 | This troublesome invisibility in the material record is often inversely related to its semantic value , and activity which may well have a central place in the police model of reality can well remain beyond the grasp of the outsider . |
4 | Visit to Australia cos we might as well have a long cruise . |
5 | It is true that these processes may well have a spatial expression in a specific situation , but there are others to which it is difficult to attribute any physical manifestation , or by definition which can not have a spatial expression at all . |
6 | They include such things as stock control , critical path analysis , and organiser programs — and may well have a major role to play in mathematics learning in the future . |
7 | These latter two barriers are an area where SEAS , the Scottish Export Assistance Scheme , may well have a useful role in lowering such non tariff barriers . |
8 | The ‘ individual ’ approach adopts the former stance , always starting from the individually assessed needs of each child and trying to produce a ‘ match ’ between child and task ( albeit recognising that the modifications made may well have a beneficial spin-off effect for other children in the class ) . |
9 | Nor should you be reluctant to let it be known that you are contemplating buying from another retail outlet , as the fear of losing a sale to a rival may well have a favourable impact on the price . |
10 | Even when the working party has produced its final report as for History , or made strong recommendations after wide consultation , as for modern foreign languages , the Secretary of State may well have a strong influence on the final version that becomes part of legislation . |
11 | However , this is not to deny that pornographic videos may well have a damaging effect . |
12 | The villain , if there is a villain , might well have a numbered account in outer Mongolia . |
13 | Yet the bargain that we make with drugs may well have a Faustian quality . |
14 | It is obvious that a philosophical discussion may well have a high Fog Index and yet be comprehensible to the initiated . |
15 | With the soaring costs of producing meat and feedstuffs for cattle , the animal-plant hybrids may well have a promising future . |
16 | Patients referred from family practitioners are likely to be younger and might well have a different incidence of disease causing anaemia . |
17 | A product may well have a different shelf life in different markets ; alternatively , a product may be released for marketing in certain markets but not in others . |
18 | It appears that the Brasserie was opened on the basis of a ‘ hunch ’ , and while it may well have a ready-made market in L'Auberge 's existing clientele , there was always a risk that this would simply be split between the two units . |
19 | As major platforms such as CD-I and CDTV find success in consumer markets , the widespread use of the technologies for home education , self-improvement and popular reference may well have a push-through effect into the schools . |
20 | Might as well have a proper look , while we 're here . ’ |
21 | Dick Hern would not be drawn into comparisons with Nashwan at the same stage of his career , but on yesterday 's evidence Hamdan Al Maktoum could well have a natural successor to his great champion . |