Example sentences of "may [be] make " in BNC.

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1 It may motivate readers to dig more deeply or may be make a practical contribution to death education in the local schools .
2 In general terms , heavier impacts may be made on the body because of the muscular ‘ padding ’ available .
3 By law no attempts may be made to hasten death or prolong the life of the sufferer .
4 Thus completed , he signed the form ‘ accepting and submitting himself to the statutes , rules , regulations and ordinances of McGill University and of the Faculty or Faculties in which I am registered , and to any amendments thereto which may be made while I am a student of the university and I promise to observe the same . ’
5 Grants may be made for items such as the installation of a prepayment meter , reconnection charges and essential household equipment such as cookers and heaters .
6 Alternatively , vouchers are supplied and payment may be made by cash or cheque at banks and showrooms .
7 Only one deposit may be made and up to £300 a day withdrawn in cash from branches .
8 Divisibility — the range of income levels in diverse marketplaces means that the divisibility of a product ( so that trial purchase may be made easily ) will be very influential
9 A number of points may be made about this debate .
10 Small repairs may be made to a damaged surface by flooding the affected area with molten asphalt after the defective section has been cut out .
11 But the Manx courts have now agreed that copies may be made available to defendants in a criminal case to be heard next year against eight people involved in the Savings&Investment collapse .
12 This simple risotto provides a filling supper dish and may be made with an end chunk of salame .
13 Very expensive liver sausages may be made from calves ' or goose livers , but these are difficult to find and very rich in taste .
14 Further , by wills and settlements , provision may be made for those who may come into existence at a future time , subject to the rule against perpetuities , which forbids any disposition which is not certain to take effect ( if it takes effect at all ) within lives in being and twenty-one years afterwards ; but a life in being includes a person en ventre sa mere at the time when the will or settlement takes effect .
15 Property ( other than a legal estate in land ) may be transferred , and binding promises may be made to an infant , but in general he is unable to make a binding disposition of his property or to make binding promises to others .
16 Two particular points may be made about offences of physical violation .
17 A jealous horse may resent hands that smell of its rival ; a greedy horse may be upset by empty hands that smell of food ; and an aggressive stallion may be made dangerous by hands that smell of other stallions or a mare in oestrus .
18 Lloyd 's deputy chairman Richard Hazell 's £155 million Syndicate 190 , hit by pollution claims , is contemplating going into ‘ run off ’ , though ‘ no decision may be made for some time ’ , says underwriter John Weatherall .
19 Lloyd 's deputy chairman Richard Hazell 's £155 million Syndicate 190 , hit by pollution claims , is contemplating going into ‘ run off ’ , though ‘ no decision may be made for some time ’ , says underwriter John Weatherall .
20 Admission under these sections , in brief , may be made when a person is suffering from a mental disorder , and such admission is in the interests of the person 's ( defined as patient ) own health or safety or for the protection of other persons .
21 Section 4 may last up to 72 hours , and may be made only when admission is of urgent necessity and complying with the provisions of section 2 would cause undesirable delay .
22 Application may be made by an ASW or nearest relative although the draft code of practice ( Department of Health , 1989 ) states the former should apply whenever possible .
23 Two initial observations may be made .
24 In fact a good analogy may be made with human relationships .
25 Nominations may be made by boards or members under arrangements introduced by Council under B-law 68(i) .
26 Advance bookings for parties may be made by contacting the general office .
27 Each one may be made responsible for a specific task .
28 Flights are planned many months in advance , but alteration to these may be made by the IATA scheduling committee which regulates the movements of all international air traffic .
29 Further alterations may be made by airports or airlines later than this .
30 An ESO may be made only if the court is satisfied that the child ‘ is of compulsory school age and is not being properly educated ’ .
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