Example sentences of "well have a " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 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 .
3 They might as well have a badge on them saying Steal Me in big black letters .
4 Mr Winchester may well have a point , but he fails to mention the profitable presence of IBM in Japan , Hong Kong and Singapore .
5 Might as well have a go , eh , now that I 'm here ? — I 'll pay for us both , if that 's what you 're worried about . ’
6 My mother and my best friend , both of whom believed that I could just as well have a bath at home , came with me .
7 All humans may well have a place on the genealogy which begins with Adam ; but the point where , say , the French line diverges from the Libyan line is likely to some hundreds of generations above the present adult men of Libya and France .
8 You may well have a copy of a video of a typical school day that you use at induction meetings .
9 The local paper may well have a ‘ What 's On ’ column and will publicise details of your fund raising and social events free .
10 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 .
11 Most of my friends will buy this album and we usually waste a lot of time discussing the merits of whatever record we have recently bought , so we may well have a few arguments on whether to eat meat or not .
12 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 .
13 ‘ You might as well have a couple of hours on the settee , ’ Molly suggested , then turned away in her embarrassment .
14 He may well have a point .
15 With the soaring costs of producing meat and feedstuffs for cattle , the animal-plant hybrids may well have a promising future .
16 She may well have a thing or two to teach the Goldsmiths ' graduates about handling the demands of the art world and media .
17 If title-page and the information on the reverse agree as to date , and there is nothing to indicate earlier editions , then you may well have a ‘ first ’ .
18 Seton and Ramsay were in favour , especially as this might well have a delaying effect on invasion moves .
19 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 .
20 Yet the bargain that we make with drugs may well have a Faustian quality .
21 ‘ I thought I might as well have a bit of a motoring holiday at the same time , ’ he explains .
22 ‘ I did n't just wake up one morning and say ‘ Oh gee , I ca n't get in for a facial — I might as well have a baby ’ . ’
23 The villain , if there is a villain , might well have a numbered account in outer Mongolia .
24 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 .
25 However , this is not to deny that pornographic videos may well have a damaging effect .
26 Might as well have a proper look , while we 're here . ’
27 First , the new approach may make the teacher aware of some lack of understanding of X — the originator of the innovation may well have a more comprehensive understanding of the topic and possibly a more detailed map of children 's paths towards it but neither is in fact essential for the promotion of the feeling of insecurity in the teacher .
28 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 .
29 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 ) .
30 This separation of levels may well have a role to play in the study and teaching of discourse , and we shall need to think carefully about its role in language learning .
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