Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Both at home and at school , methodologies may fundamentally obstruct the negotiation of meaning and , in doing so , reduce the likelihood of deaf children enriching their language skills .
2 The medical profession is supporting one of the main foundations of the strategy — the clinical terms project — which in the longer term may fundamentally change the way in which doctors work .
3 Those commentators who blame Labour for not pursuing an alternative set of more socially just proposals in the conditions of August 1931 ought rather to blame the electorate for not giving Labour sufficient support to form a majority government in 1929 .
4 Another flawed but striking recent movie is DOA ( Buena Vista ) , an update from the creators of Max Headroom of the classic 1949 thriller of the same name , which may detrimentally alter the plot of the original but boasts nonetheless some arresting high-tech intimations of neo-expressionist atmosphere .
5 It follows that the Convention is not a direct protection for freedom of speech in Britain : it is a persuasive and educative force which , if media interests have the patience and determination to seek rulings from Strasbourg , may slowly shape the operation of British law in favour of public interest reporting .
6 These are accumulated over many years and may vigorously colour the way we respond to all kinds of situations today .
7 To these users , a visit to the doctor may eventually mean a visit from the police .
8 But perhaps , too , we go to observe our death , prefigured in the element in which we can not survive , and which may eventually cover the earth for all time .
9 If all goes well , you may eventually sign an agency deal so that you have someone booking your gigs and possibly arranging tours for the band .
10 The magisterial pronouncement of Sir George Macdonald on the Antonine Wall has now been overthrown by the brilliant study of the samian by Brian Hartley ( 1972 ) , and the work at Carpow and other Severan sites will help to stabilize the dating of the pottery of this period , so with more revisions and adjustments , we may eventually have a framework which will endure , but only possible since all the groundwork had been so carefully prepared .
11 With so many people who may eventually receive the training to prescribe , we can imagine the advantages that patients will derive from that training and delivery .
12 BELOW The use of portable computers on an excavation may eventually replace the use of record sheets .
13 This engrossing spectacle fascinates the predator who may eventually devour the tail , although it has little nutritional value .
14 On the other hand , as Acheson said in his memoirs , there are limits on the extent to which one may successfully coerce an ally .
15 Little mention has been made so far of those elements of material forms which relate to each other in an ordered fashion , and which may thereby influence the manner in which they are utilized in constituting cultural patterns or acting as systems of meaning .
16 In most material culture , the individual object is as much a type-token of the larger group of identical handbags , armchairs , spears or canoes as is the case with words , and , even when held as individual property , may thereby mark the relation of object and owner to the set of items it represents .
17 It must involve some acts being done in State B , over which the law of that State may properly exercise a measure of control .
18 The second question which arises for determination is whether the proceeding before the justice or justices , if there happens to be more than one justice before whom the person arrested is brought under section 7(5) , necessitates the giving of evidence on oath with the opportunity to the person arrested or his legal representative to cross-examine and the person arrested having the opportunity to give evidence himself , before the justice of the peace may properly form an opinion on the matters set out in paragraphs ( a ) and ( b ) .
19 For example , a surgeon may justifiably run the risk of killing the patient if the operation is necessary to save life , whereas employers may not take a substantial risk with the lives of their workers in order to increase profits .
20 The sunk costs involved in building a strong market position may additionally become a barrier to entry , even if the intention was ‘ innocent ’ competition rather than a deliberate strategy to exclude potential competitors .
21 Little is done without reference to the mother , and the mother , for her part , may empathically share the child 's feelings , and even know telepathically what the child is doing when out of sight .
22 They are also the very wishes which in total welfare states lead to what we may justly term the externalization of paranoia : for in these totalitarian societies the delusions of the paranoiac become actual , tangible realities .
23 Oh my god , an Indian , oh let's all have a party Anyway alright gorgeous .
24 It is not clear that military involvement in such disputes is always undertaken willingly and , indeed , the military 's own attitude in any given situation may crucially affect the ability of the government to pursue its policy .
25 Her role may be restricted to advising the carers on how to treat the patient , and she may only visit the family once .
26 In some cases you may only choose a maximum of one unit of a specific type , for example you can only have one Mob of Big'uns .
27 In some cases you may only choose a maximum of one unit of a specific type , for example you can only have one regiment of Reiksguard Knights .
28 If the binding energy is low the ejected electrons carry most of the photon energy and can escape from perhaps a depth of 100 Å , while low-energy electrons ejected from levels of binding energy of 1000 eV or more may only reach the surface from depths as small as 1 Å : this effectively includes only the surface layer of atoms .
29 Also , some squares in the pattern may only match a square on the edge of the board .
30 This provides that a court may only make a care order if it is satisfied that the child concerned is suffering significant harm .
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