Example sentences of "might [adv] have [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I thought we might perhaps have lunch . ’ |
2 | imply that I might soon have funds . ’ |
3 | So I might just have Monday Tuesday Monday Tuesday . |
4 | And however well endowed he was with these qualities , he might still have difficulty on some points . |
5 | I had had and might still have cancer and was waiting to find out exactly what was happening in my lung . |
6 | This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act . |
7 | Walking exercises your legs and buttock muscles and builds up stamina , but a few add-on exercises will really pay dividends — though you might still have trouble standing after the first day on your skis . |
8 | Society might also have views on two other aspects on monopoly performance : the amount of political power that large companies are in a position to exert , and the distributional issue of fairness in relation to the large supernormal profits that a monopolist can earn . |
9 | Norman Smith , match secretary of Irby Angling Club , reckons that with perfect conditions the Classic champion might even have 80lb of fish . |
10 | Such employees might well have claims for compensation against the UK government for defective implementation of the Directive , if they can show that , had the restriction not been included in the Regulations , their claim would have succeeded . |
11 | But any new Warden might well have difficulty in taking over . |
12 | An eminent nonconformist might well have reservations about a now Anglo-Catholic son seeking holy orders in the Church of England . |
13 | A and B might well have features in common from the outset ( the c elements in the figure ) and these will produce primary generalization — training on A will give associative strength to stimulus elements that are present also in B. The X representation functions in just the same way as the c elements in producing generalization except for the fact that the ability of A and B to activate X is based on prior conditioning . |
14 | Of course there are lots of questions which would have to be sorted out — the difference is the Scottish Education system , & the courses offered , for a start — & you might well have doubts about cutting yourself off from your friends & so forth . |
15 | A jelly might sometimes have lumps of fruit in it , just as space can have lumps of matter in it — the Earth , the Sun , the Moon . |
16 | For instance , any such book might meaningfully have sections on ‘ Principles ’ and ‘ Systems ’ and the ‘ Principles ’ section might be decomposed into subsections on ‘ Computer Principles ’ and on ‘ Human Principles ’ . |
17 | Perhaps he needed these faraway successes to convince himself that his life had once had value , might yet have value again . |
18 | Pray that the missionary might truly have God 's heart for those who do not know Jesus . |
19 | ‘ I 'd thought we might safely have dinner here tonight . |