Example sentences of "who may be [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It is wrong for a relatively well off professional person to do this with clients who may be on the bread-line .
2 Saunders , who may be on his way to Aston Villa , had a curiously mixed game .
3 Perhaps a real top class defender , ca n't think of who may be on the market tho .
4 The video can be used at induction meetings and loaned to parents who may be considering sending children to your school .
5 The supply of left-handed clubs is so insufficient as to deter those left-handers who may be considering taking up the sport .
6 I urge anyone who may be considering voting Labour to think very deeply about whether Neil Kinnock can really be trusted to run this country .
7 Perhaps the most important point is that , regardless of who may be at the launch point , the pilot alone bears the responsibility for accepting or rejecting the launch in the light of the situation as he sees it from the cockpit .
8 We should first consider the availability and quality of data concerning the populations who may be at risk from the storage and transport of hazardous substances , from toxic air pollution , from flooding and so on .
9 So well known was the latter that the Department of Health and Social Security lists the elderly among patients ‘ who may be at increased risk ’ .
10 People who may be at risk of having HIV are asked not to donate blood .
11 Pameton has been kept on the market as a means of making paracetamol available to patients who may be at risk of self harm , but only on private prescription .
12 Acting for a seller , who may be at risk of heavy damages payable to a disappointed buyer , the seller should be asked explicitly whether anyone else has an interest in the property : if so , that person 's written consent to the sale should be obtained , or he or she should join in the contract for sale to declare and relinquish his or her interest , if any .
13 Very diffuse boundaries between its members indicate an enmeshed family who may be over involved ; very rigid boundaries , with minimal involvement are a sign of the disengaged family .
14 With regard to social contact , it is the person with AIDS who may be in danger .
15 Since the early 1970s a variety of child abuse inquiries and DHSS circulars have emphasized that the establishment of child abuse registers , case conferences and increased inter-professional co-ordination will enhance the central aims of attempting to predict , prevent and identify the children who may be in actual or potential danger of child abuse .
16 We have decided to hand them over ( Gen Keightley is in touch and on good terms with the Russian general on his right ) , but I suggested that the Russians should at the same time give us any British prisoners or wounded who may be in his area .
17 The prospect of increased future earnings will also have no impact where a manager plans to leave the employment market , as will often be the case with chief executives who may be in their final period of office .
18 Er , so that 's okay to an extent , but obviously we 've got an approved list of building societies and banks , which we never used to have , but we 've realized that er since B C C I p particularly and the housing market as bad as it is , there are some building societies and banks who may be in difficulties , and if they go down erm then they may not be taken over .
19 Organisations with charitable status operating in a particular field often acquire knowledge and expertise which can prove extremely valuable to individuals who may be in need of that sort of advice .
20 These problems may be sought out by a law centre with a view to running ‘ campaigns ’ to benefit all those in the local community who may be in similar difficulties .
21 This project investigates a major application of standardised testing in primary schools : to identify children who may be in need of special attention or teaching .
22 Before the tears become a torrent , let's offer 10 copies of this treasure house of a book to 10 Evertonians who may be in urgent need of the comfort that past achievements can sometimes bring .
23 It describes a social-psychological process whereby heroin and its associated cultural knowledge ( for instance , how to use it ) are spread by means of communication and exchange between individuals who live in close proximity to one another , but who may be from different social groups .
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