Example sentences of "[noun pl] may be helpful " in BNC.

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1 These notes may be helpful .
2 That is why training in managing meetings may be helpful .
3 Some examples which illustrate successful and unsuccessful uses of these methods on Modular Course evaluation projects may be helpful .
4 Recreational pursuits may be helpful in directing attention from the main area of concern .
5 I have also to think of how our prayers may be helpful to God , especially in regard to desperate situations in the world .
6 Of particular interest to CPRW is the Forum 's view that ‘ … that the application of Statutory Green Belts may be helpful in controlling settlement form ’ .
7 To help a social worker clear a framework for how to proceed in family work some theoretical ideas may be helpful .
8 In some pain-dominant patients with IBS , tricyclic antidepressants may be helpful even if depression is not obvious .
9 A careful family history and investigation of first-degree relatives may be helpful .
10 In this debate the following questions may be helpful .
11 Two further questions may be helpful .
12 Attempts to delay stent clogging by prescribing long term antibiotics or by the mucolytic action of aspirin have met with little success , though recent studies suggest that silver impregnation of the stent and omitting side holes may be helpful .
13 The Minister 's comments may be helpful in the House , but they will not allay the concern that has been expressed throughout Northern Ireland — for example , in Upper Bann — about the amount of money that is needed to deal with the problem of concrete cancer at Craigavon hospital .
14 Hypnosis , acupuncture and other " alternative " therapies may be helpful in covering the detoxification period in some people just as they can be helpful in detoxification in other forms of addiction .
15 The following suggestions may be helpful :
16 For helping pupils towards greater sophistication in their thinking , the following suggestions may be helpful .
17 In difficult cases ambulatory electroencephalography and special electrodes may be helpful .
18 Such evidence as saliva and seminal fluid tests , footprints or fingerprints may be helpful .
19 Generalisations may be helpful to a certain extent but we have to take into account complex variants which are law-related but not necessarily legal : Richard Vogler ( in Chapter 7 of this volume ) for example , leads us to ask whether the use of law will lead to a bureaucratisation and disintegration of the peace movement as in the 1960s ?
20 It may be necessary to chart events and actions to be able to show later that teachers acted promptly and appropriately ; in child abuse particularly , but also in other cases , careful records may be helpful in protecting the child or someone else from harm .
21 Once again these facts may be helpful .
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