Example sentences of "might [adv] [vb infin] from " in BNC.

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1 We also have a number of collectors , one of whom I visited recently to discover a house so piled with neatly catalogued shoe boxes full of cards that I could not see how he and I might successfully get from the front door to the kitchen without a Sherpa .
2 Simply , that the issues that affect our lives are entirely underpinned by a belief in women 's dubious nature ; their animality , their polluting tendencies , a sense that something might just erupt from the female that is dangerous and needs to be controlled .
3 It offered no defence ; and defence was needed , for on the opposite side of the yard a wall ran right up to the house and although it was lower than the roof an agile man might easily scramble from it up on to the roof itself .
4 Where in the 1930s the mother was given solemn warnings as to what would happen if she disobeyed the rules , the mode now is to refer her , with continual reassurances however , to what might possibly result from some mistaken handlings : ‘ Here 's what happens once in a while when the needs of the child are n't recognized ’ ( Spock , 1946 , chapter on ‘ The Two Year Old ’ ) .
5 Whether a price indication is misleading depends , not upon what the trailer intended to convey , but upon what a consumer might reasonably understand from what he reads or is told .
6 Differences between species belonging to those families could result from differences in their habitat , but might also result from differences in , say , the structure of the placenta , which varies between the two families .
7 He suggested something might also result from talks between the Government and the European Commission concerning the status of satellite broadcasts .
8 It might also appear from such an analysis that working-class people are converging towards RP back [ a ] in grass , path , and middle-class people diverging from it , when in fact there is no evidence that the usage of these speakers is influenced by RP in any way at all .
9 Heat exchangers might also benefit from treatment with polymers .
10 Or , having positive energy , it might also escape from the vicinity of the black hole as a real particle or antiparticle ( Fig. 7.4 ) .
11 In this way Miliband argued that power was derived not just from ownership of the means of production but might also derive from position as a politician or bureaucrat in the state 's institutions .
12 ‘ An old flame , perhaps , ’ suggested Dorothea who , often an unthinking woman , felt vaguely that the afternoon might now benefit from a stroke of the unlikely .
13 He glared desperately around him as though in the faint hope that Siegfried might magically appear from nowhere .
14 The athlete statues of Polykleitos , later in the century , might well stem from this tradition , and he is claimed for both cities .
15 Communicating the conclusions of best practice reviews is an activity that might well benefit from a best practice review itself .
16 However , there are several groups of patients at high risk for sudden death who might potentially benefit from prophylactic ICD implantation .
17 The scheme includes access to databases on health and safety topics which can help representatives overcome the sense of isolation they might otherwise experience from being based offshore , he said .
18 ‘ Gina , I know rape is not just a physical assault , I know Miranda might never recover from the emotional damage , I am concerned for the girl . ’
19 Deterioration in hepatocyte function might therefore result from depriving the hepatocyte of normal matrix signalling in addition to any architectural disturbance that may occur .
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