Example sentences of "which may be [prep] " in BNC.

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31 Although they tend to fit one pencil size only , there are rather more expensive holders available for use with wide pencils and industrial chalks which may be of some help to artists .
32 The above findings suggest there are some additional therapeutic strategies which may be of value in limiting the effects of phenylalanine .
33 An alternative , indeed additional , remedy which may be of help to an aggrieved investor is that provided by s.61 of the FSA .
34 Common male fetish objects , which may be of minor significance to the individual concerned , are breasts , legs , hair , shoes and underwear .
35 The following is a selected list of contacts arising from this report which may be of interest to readers , particularly those interested in commercial development .
36 LRDA produces a monthly listing of vacant properties in the region which may be of interest to you if you are still seeking workshop premises .
37 An investigation into approaches and tools which may be of assistance in obtaining satisfactory loading efficiency .
38 we are trying to identify the appropriate person in their organisation to whom we should write concerning a business opportunity which may be of interest to them .
39 A member of the Society has drawn attention to a point which arises in connection with the payment of sickness benefit under the National Insurance Acts which may be of interest to other members of the Society .
40 We communicate with each other through a variety of methods — by the staff newsletter ; by Office Notices ( which may be of three types — mandatory , advisory , and informative ) ; by internal memos and notes ; committee minutes , and by word of mouth .
41 Another factor which may be of relevance is the potentially carcinogenic substrate ( N-nitrosamines and N-nitrosamides ) formed with achlorhydria in the fairly large gastric remnant ( rumen and antrum ) after fundectomy .
42 During employment the employee may damage his employer 's business in the following ways : ( a ) working for a competitor during his hours of employment ; ( b ) working for a competitor in his spare time ; ( c ) making preparations in order to compete with his employer after he has left ; ( d ) disclosing or using the employer 's business secrets ; or ( e ) failing to disclose information which may be of use to his employer and in some instances personally profiting from its use .
43 The important points which emerge from this case are that the employer will be able to rely on this part of the duty of fidelity if it can be shown that the employee works for a trade competitor in his spare time and : ( a ) knows of business secrets which may be of use to the competitor and/or ( b ) occupies a position which makes it expedient to recognise the existence of his duty to work for the employer alone .
44 There is a full discussion of this case at p76. 1.5 The employee 's duty to disclose to his employer information which may be of use to that employer ( and not personally to profit from it ) If , during the course of employment , an employee receives information which is or may reasonably be relevant to his employer 's business then he is under a duty : ( a ) to disclose all relevant information received to the employer ; and ( b ) not to use that information for his or another 's benefit unless the employer consents .
45 it matures on a year by year basis which may be of interest .
46 Effects of incompatibility between product and this primary container , which may be on either product or package or both , e.g. , corrosion of metal tubes ; stress-cracking of plastic tubes ; absorption of constituents of the product such as preservatives by the container ; leaching of constituents of the container by the product .
47 A short statement of the definition would be this : grammar deals with closed system choices which may be between items ( this , that , he , she , we ) or between categories ( singular , plural ; past , present , future ) ; lexis is concerned with open set choices , which are always between items ( chair , bench , seat , stool ) .
48 Pupils also benefit by experiencing another use of technology which may be outside their own experience .
49 Where he is the occupier of premises in or on which the chattels ( not attached to the premises ) are found and , before the finding ‘ he has manifested an intention to exercise control over the [ premises ] and the things which may be upon it or in it ’ .
50 It is not the intention in this paper to examine critically the rhetoric and ideology which may be behind the government 's inclusion of these principles within its legislation .
51 The choice of treatment may be skewed towards that which can be paid for , rather than that which may be in the best interests of or preferred by the patient .
52 In the area at the front of the skull are connecting sacs which enable the dolphin to cut off one or all of the four high-frequency signals which may be in operation .
53 I have begun to Fence which is a man 's game and I am to have my uncle Sette 's foil when next we go to England which may be in the summer .
54 Apart from medicines , there are many other potentially dangerous chemicals , solid or liquid , which may be in any ordinary home : for example , substances for cleaning and decorating , and killing weeds and rodents .
55 Indexing journals ( often simply called indexes ) give the straightforward bibliographical details of articles in the range of journals ( which may be in hundreds ) covered by the indexing service .
56 Computer-aided design : ‘ The use of a computer-based system to assist in translating a requirement or concept into an engineered design , utilising a data bank of design principles and information on such matters as properties of materials , followed by production of information ( which may be in the form of drawings ) for manufacture .
57 A tanker ban is only one of a package of measures which may be in place by the year 2000 .
58 The first proper historical evaluation of the subject to have been made in the United States , the exhibition has been organised by curator Elizabeth Armstrong and her associate , Joan Rothfuss , and will be seen at the Whitney Museum of American Art ( 16 July-3 October ) , Chicago 's Museum of Contemporary Art ( 13 November-16 January 1994 ) , the Wexner Center for the Visual Arts , Columbus OH ( 18 February-17 April 1994 ) , the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art ( 12 May-24 July 1994 ) and the Fundacio Antoni Tapies , Barcelona ( 17 November1994–12 January 1995 ) , the only European venue confirmed for this important exhibition of predominantly European material , although Armstrong told The Art Newspaper that she expects to add at least two further venues in Europe , one of which may be in London .
59 The more efficient use of energy which may be in prospect does not ensure economic viability , particularly when interest rates are so high .
60 The second difference concerns the ratio of the baryon mass ( that is , the mass in the form of stars and hot gas ) to the dark mass ( which may be in the form of exotic particles like neutrinos or axions ) .
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