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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Whatever doubts there may be about Edward 's commitment to crusade , none can be entertained of John XXII's , for he did all that he could to bring England to a state of peace and Edward to the point of departure .
2 Whatever advantages there may be to the shareholders in the adoption of one or other of these goals as the object of directors ' duties , liability rules , as will be shown in more detail in section II , are too unsophisticated a control technique to make it possible in practice to discriminate between them .
3 Whatever reservations there may be about individual decisions from time to time , the basic premise that most planning decisions should be taken locally has never been seriously challenged .
4 According to them , to accept the legitimacy of an authority is simply to accept that whatever other reasons there may be for a certain action , its being required by the authority is an additional reason for its performance .
5 Whatever arguments there may be in favour of the independence of members of assemblies or parliaments , it is hard to see what they have to do with representation as it is commonly understood .
6 But , however many ways there may be of being alive , it is certain that there are vastly more ways of being dead , or rather not alive .
7 Whatever perplexities there may be about ontology ( that is , about the nature of the reality described ) there is no perplexity whatever about the procedures .
8 He states ‘ whatever internal divisions there may be within the business class are secondary to their common interests in the continuing success of big business as a whole ’ .
9 What personal records there may be of more general ‘ social life ’ have the limitations that their authors are rarely ‘ ordinary ’ people .
10 No matter how many cells there may be in the body of an elephant , the elephant began life as a single cell , a fertilized egg .
  Next page