Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [adv] [vb infin] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 For the purpose of seeing whether his suspicions are well-founded , he may … stop any person carrying goods which he suspects to have been stolen , he may also examine the person and detain him .
2 If an individual appears unable to pay his debts or has no reasonable prospect of paying he may also face a bankruptcy petition .
3 He may also face the prospect of long-term hardship , if he can not return to work at all .
4 He may also have a contact man in each functional department responsible for co-ordination and monitoring of the work within the department .
5 He may well feel the need to scare me off .
6 He may well have a point .
7 Gooch has been known to carry a long face on his sleeve and he may well appreciate the strength of Gatting .
8 How that might change his nature , there 's the question ’ mean that he is determined to become emperor , and if he did , he may well become a tyrant and abuse his power , although he seems very noble at the moment .
9 He may well cause a bit more trouble yet .
10 He may even have a right to have it .
11 He may even have the town named after him .
12 He may even live the kind of life he does not really like simply because he feels that because everyone else is so much wiser than he is they must know best about what is right for him .
13 Should the wielder attack and fail to score a hit , he may immediately re-roll the attack again , giving him a second chance to hit .
14 Although the buyer can not complain under section 15(2) ( c ) of defects which he could reasonably have discovered on an examination of the sample , he may nevertheless have an action under section 14(2) or ( 3 ) above .
15 He may simply assist a competitor in any way which does or may have an adverse and material effect on his employer 's business .
16 If the seller can not maintain an action under section 49 , he may still have a claim for damages which he can bring under section 50 ‘ where the buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to accept and pay for the goods . ’
17 He may never appreciate the VIP treatment he is getting .
18 This is better for the male , too , and he may actually inform the female in some way that she is a secondary female , but as yet we do not know how .
19 In the same way he may only despatch the liquor to the customer outwith permitted hours .
20 The child knows that he may only win the object or activity back by compliance .
21 Whether this visit took place after Anselm 's return to England in September 1100 is unclear , but Anselm left the pope in no doubt about his view of the matter , and the pope promised to send no legate with authority over Canterbury during Anselm 's life time ; but it is clear that he did not , and could not , accept the Canterbury claim made by Anselm , that he should never appoint a legate in England other than the archbishop himself .
22 ( c ) He must normally make a record of the search there and then unless this is impracticable .
23 So , if the rational person thinks that the aggregate demand curve will be at AD 1 he must also expect a price level of P 2 .
24 Thus Vaughan is assuming a certain amount of shared knowledge on the part of the reader ; but because we can not , naturally , see things from the perspective of his origo , he must also assist the reader in the assignment of indexical or deictic meanings .
25 Someone might say : it is a principle of personal morality that if someone shares in the gains of another 's action he must also share the responsibility for wrongs that other person does .
26 Assuming that a president can overcome these difficulties sufficiently to establish some discipline within the executive branch , he must also obtain the agreement of congress to his legislative proposals .
27 ‘ A challenge ? ’ she husked painfully , her eyes so wide she thought he must surely read the anguish in them .
28 Even if A has the power of arrest , he must ordinarily inform the person arrested that he is being arrested and the reason for it , i. e. the act for which arrest is made : Christie v. Leachinsky [ facts ] .
29 For an object to appear to be φ to someone , in the epistemic sense of ‘ appear ’ , he must already have the concept φ .
30 Having decided he must again race the tide , he began a desperate cumbersome run along the edge of the trough towards the breakwater .
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