Example sentences of "she might be [adj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 She might be better at thinking up things as stupid as their games ( infinite pieces which were only infinite in one direction , from a point ; you could hold one end but it was still infinite !
2 She might be light-headed with fear , but she would not give this vile creature the pleasure of seeing it .
3 Vitor did not think she might be pregnant by him , Ashley realised numbly .
4 She might be one of those modern women .
5 Of course she might be pleased with that outcome , but she may also have a new feeling of helplessness , in that she has failed to manage her own problems .
6 ‘ But being a woman and not able to inherit , I suppose she might be used to being a second string .
7 They have been placed at the head of this chapter only because it is the extreme case which so often bothers the social worker in consideration of what he or she might be involved in if the sexual side of the work develops .
8 At the moment she could not remember which day this was , but she might be able to if she thought about it .
9 No , go on , I want the reason , she might be able to if her mum and dad pay for her go on
10 Well I mean when Shaney 's living out there , I mean , she might be able to a
11 She might be soft in the head about everything else , but never about money .
12 He could imagine that she might be interested in its money-making propensity at the end of the year .
13 She had sensed from the beginning that his compliments to her were of a different kind from those he bestowed so liberally upon every female in sight , but she could n't tell him that , while in her heart she liked them , she might be annoyed by his assumption that they were always acceptable .
14 At the end of that week they took Anna to the doctor and he was worried that she might be scared of being examined , but she was n't .
15 Willy sees himself as the beneficent saviour who will ‘ irrigate ’ her ‘ emotional desert ’ ( 17,138 ) , and any attempt by her to suggest that she might be happier without him is ‘ blackmarked against me as pretentiousness ’ ( 136 ) .
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