Example sentences of "might [adv] have a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It was rather like working out the details of one of her plots : circumstances capable of more than one interpretation ; actions which might or might not be innocent ; individuals who might or might not have a genuine motive , the means and opportunity to commit the crime .
2 In the past , similar games have been used to groom club managers for greater things and Swindon Town might just have a future England manager in their midst .
3 ‘ I 'm staying at Dalian Atkinson 's house tonight and I might just have a little drink or two — hopefully he will be paying .
4 We might , if i if it 's a nice day we might possibly have a little walk out somewhere or run out somewhere , or something
5 How distressed and worried is industry in those regions that we might mistakenly have a Labour Government , which would do so much damage to inward investment ?
6 And where they were employed , their duties varied from place to place — some fulfilled judicial as well as financial functions , others might even have a military role .
7 As noted above , the Rome Treaty did not explicitly incorporate any regional dimension , but it did recognise that EC policies might well have a differential spatial impact .
8 The villain , if there is a villain , might well have a numbered account in outer Mongolia .
9 Patients referred from family practitioners are likely to be younger and might well have a different incidence of disease causing anaemia .
10 Three precious points to lift Everton clear of the bottom three and on the day John Barnes began his return in the Liverpool A team a performance from Goodison 's 29-year-old comeback kid to raise hopes that this second marriage might yet have a happy ending .
11 He might never have a better chance .
12 The owner of large , complex estates , who did not manage them personally , might never have a clear idea of his full income .
13 They might therefore have a physicochemical affinity for one another .
  Next page