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

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1 Local income taxes might be thought capable of performing better against the criterion of equity , but it was argued that they would be difficult to administer in the UK , for the reasons outlined by Kay and King ( 1986 ) .
2 It might be thought odd that the desperately poor spent hard-earned pence on providing for a ceremony they would never see .
3 She wondered , however , whether the philosophy of matching services closely to needs might eventually mean that existing residents who were relatively independent might be thought unsuitable for Mencap 's homes .
4 It might be thought reasonable to treat all cases of NSU so diagnosed when they initially present to the clinic as if they had a sexually transmitted disease and prescribe appropriate antibiotics , and , indeed , this is common practice in most clinics .
5 ‘ I have only just begun discussions with Celtic over renewing my contract and it has not got to the stage of the manager making me an offer , ’ said the player whose ability to impose himself on the opposition might be thought worthy of international recognition .
6 Cecil 's yearly income from politics at the end of his life was nearly £7,000 without the presents from Spain and other hidden receipts ; that might be thought sufficient .
7 For disability rights reform , it might be thought sufficient to take the framework of the British discrimination statutes , add the terms ‘ disability ’ and ‘ disabled person ’ where appropriate , and supply a definition of the newly protected class .
8 The poem might be thought self-pitying if it were more believable .
9 Thus the fact that , for Rayleigh numbers only a little above critical , there is only a limited range of unstable wavenumber κ might be thought adequate information for a knowledge of the flow .
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