Example sentences of "it might [adv] [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 It might also suggest that if fat people have psychological problems , these may well be a result of the obesity , or at most a contributory factor .
2 And although a green glow that is weaker than it ought to be might mean that some of the cells in the area are turning malignant , it might also mean that the operator has the end of the bronchoscope too far from the target , or pointing at an awkward angle .
3 At this point it might well happen that blocks of shops and houses would be built down one side of the market place , taking the place of a number of stalls , and so creating the plan , described above , where the original open space is reduced to a broad main street , with a detached block of buildings down one side , behind which is a narrow back street , as at St Albans , or Kimbolton in Huntingdonshire , to speak of only two examples .
4 It might even mean that the personnel records and salaries systems could be cost justified largely on the basis of savings in the recruitment area .
5 It might even suggest that perhaps Lady Thatcher did , after all , have a point when she despaired of public transport .
6 From a detached perspective , it might therefore seem that the political viability of the USSR 's East European clients depends not only on greater economic and administrative competence on their part , but the opening up of communication channels between élite and mass and a narrowing of the gulf between state and society .
7 It might therefore seem that the best , and the only rational , solution is to abandon all references to identity in connection with meaning .
8 In a highly competitive market the returns would be a satisfactory performance measure ; for a monopolist it might merely reflect that any inefficiencies in service have been passed on to the customers who have no choice but to pay the higher prices .
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