On the right is an absorption nebula from which the stars might have formed. |
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I might have pulled my front brake by accident, which is why I went over the front, but I don't know. |
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Such internal turmoil might have resulted in the past from a damaging military defeat, but has never followed such a walkover victory. |
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We then try to contact someone from the bombed area and if there's no telephone, we try to contact someone who might have extra information. |
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The many orphans of the war-torn African country of Liberia might have no stronger wish than simply to be remembered. |
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Perhaps if an equal number of eighth graders had been wait-listed, the two groups might have performed more similarly. |
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Certainly the artist of the Agnus Dei might have found a different precedent for this acanthus ornament, but it is relatively unusual. |
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At one point he even threw away all his underwear, thinking it might have shrunk in the wash and be constricting his leg. |
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About to refuse, she realized waltzing around the dance floor might have its uses after all. |
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With his red face and white walrus moustache, Plumer might have been the inspiration for the cartoonist Low's Colonel Blimp. |
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The conversation at dinner tonight might have shed some light on why I am so absent-minded. |
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In prior wars, we might have volunteered to be air-raid wardens or to roll bandages at the Red Cross. |
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Cara might have been new to their world, but she was fairly good at acclimatizing herself. |
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There are five players on the floor who might have been daydreaming during the walk-through. |
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I argued that the washerwoman might have mangled her hand if she was caught in the wringer, but it couldn't have engulfed her entirely. |
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Even an experienced programmer might have a hard time tracking down bugs caused by invalid accesses, overflowing writes, accesses to dead memory, memory leaks and the like. |
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But then again, depending on a range of factors, blah blah blah, it might have been a breach after all. |
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I thought about my younger siblings, and how I might have been catatonic if I lost them in the same manner. |
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The veteran officer believes Garner might have survived had anybody heeded his pleas. |
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Should thrombosis occur in this anatomic area, a patient might have headaches, dizziness, or even stroke-like symptoms. |
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This is the sort of home-baked delight that a much-loved grandmother might have given you alongside a glass of orange squash or a mug of instant coffee. |
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This is not the headline a Times subeditor might have chosen, nor any fair-minded one, because it made Mr Bower's argument even sillier than it was in the first place. |
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He answered her in a voice that was flat and plain, like the voice that a carrot might have. |
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If Ivar had been chomping a cigar, one might have mistaken him for a slimmed-down al capone. |
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And it's not exactly because Lifetime's version isn't nearly as campy or fun as many viewers might have been expecting. |
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The reality-based community might have a difficult time fending off these two fronts of affront. |
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And these three particular teens also might have been encouraged to see a trip to the caliphate as a way to rebel. |
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First, the cheap shot threats that might have intimidated other victims and their lawyers don't faze me. |
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The group might have condemned violence while still maintaining an adversarial relationship with the police force. |
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Some of those 900 bison might have perished naturally during the killing cold of winter and provided spring food for grizzlies. |
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In the 19th century I might have been a bookbinder and would have gone mad from glue fumes. |
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This is a real trip around the world, into some unexpected nooks and crannies, and for new sounds to satisfy your wanderlust, you might have a hard time doing better. |
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As August Bebel might have said if he were watching all this, bipartisanship is the optimism of fools. |
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Perhaps even as acerbic a critic as Kennan might have been pleased by the result. |
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Adoboli might have learned how to hide his losses during a stint in the UBS back office before he became a trader. |
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It might have been another tragic statistic in the Brazilian-traffic body count. |
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If the doctor had time to work with Li, he might have seen that his back pain was atypical and detected AS in the first visit. |
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Netanyahu might have challenged the court or tried to water down the basic law. |
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In 1976 I began investigating what quantum mechanics might have to say. |
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It is possible to walk round the loch, but you might have to wade the river at its southern end to reach the track which will return you to the Lodge. |
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His riff toward the end when he bragged about winning three times in a blue state just might have been the kindling. |
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You might have thought that with Borders shutting down, Barnes and Noble would be sitting in the catbird seat. |
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There would have been no one to superintend him, except a squirrel perhaps or a jenny wren, at which he might have winked. |
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It was just a crazy jimjam lark, concocted by a fuddled brain, but it might have had most serious consequences for the innocent clerk. |
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The failures of his marshals and a slow resumption of the offensive on his part cost him any advantage that this victory might have secured. |
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It is argued that persisting with attacks on RAF airfields might have won air superiority for the Luftwaffe. |
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Before decimalisation, a handful of change might have contained coins 100 or more years old, bearing any of five monarchs' heads. |
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This included not only the existence of singularities but also the theory that the universe might have started as a singularity. |
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After discovering his concession might have been premature, a new, more refined, wager was made. |
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He might have met her while he and other fellows were experimenting with balloons. |
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With her rouged cheeks, silver lipcoat and mascara she might have been any girl after an hour at her mother's dressing table. |
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Heavy rapid transit trains might have six to twelve cars, while lighter systems may use four or fewer. |
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For example, adjacent tracks of a double line might have to be shut down to avoid collisions with trains on those adjacent tracks. |
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Children might have waited on tables for the family, but they could not have participated in the conversation. |
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Edward became king in 1042, and given his upbringing might have been considered a Norman by those who lived across the English Channel. |
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Other Muslims might have been expected to be sympathetic, even enthusiastic. |
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When studying at a university, however, you might have to pay for accommodation and literature. |
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He suggests it might have been that Boniface was influenced by a recent reading of Bede's work. |
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Strickland found many skulls during his dig and suggested they might have been sacrificial. |
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Thus Godiva might have actually travelled through town as a penitent, in her shift. |
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If an experiment cannot be repeated to produce the same results, this implies that the original results might have been in error. |
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A single, large sheet of paper might have a written, usually partisan, account of an event. |
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In one sense, this was a reflection of an idealised king such as Charles or Charles's courtiers might have imagined. |
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It has been said that if Byron had lived and had gone on to defeat the Ottomans, he might have been declared King of Greece. |
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In the mazurkalike finale, he and the orchestra might have been dance partners. |
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Some might have reached to entrance of Baltic Sea and northern Scandinavian. |
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Its atmosphere might have been provincial, but it was never merely parochial. |
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Indeed, Emily Eavis suggested that the festival itself might have been called off, such was the severity of the weather. |
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The batsmen might have started running before the ball reaches the boundary, but those runs do not count. |
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Bermondsey might have been bad, but he, his brother and his sister were nice people from a nice family. |
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Reports suggested that the couple might have been gassed through the air conditioning system prior to the burglars' entry into the building. |
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Recent results suggest the possibility that decay rates might have a weak dependence on environmental factors. |
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A fear of monetary compensation might have been one of the reasons for the opposition. |
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The Liberal Party might have survived a short war, but the totality of the Great War called for measures that the Party had long rejected. |
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With the evacuation of the Danubian Principalities, the immediate cause of war was withdrawn and the war might have ended at this time. |
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Alternative social insurance strategies might have included a system that involved save and invest. |
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It might have slightly decreased since that time at the expense of increasing inequality within countries. |
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Any of these changes might have an effect that is highly advantageous or highly disadvantageous, but large effects are rare. |
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If the men under his charge had not mutinied, he might have been able to cross the Andes to reach the Chilean side. |
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As a girl she had speed and a knock-kneed moxie at athletics, and might have done more with it if she hadn't harvested all the glory already. |
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According to Litton, evictions might have taken place earlier but for fear of the secret societies. |
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I wish I had, for I might have learnt from it something of the kind of man he was. |
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Maugham subsequently said that if he had been able to get there six months earlier, he might have succeeded. |
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It's a wasted opportunity in that if we'd been behind it, and we wanted to do it, then it might have been good. |
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Biographer Fiona MacCarthy suggests that Morris might have suffered from a form of Tourette's syndrome as he exhibited some of the symptoms. |
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Walcott, contrary to what you might have been led to believe over the years, was never a world-beater. |
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The spacial depths between the glittering threads of the web and the chef seemed abysmic and prodigious. He might have belonged to another realm. |
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There might have been a slight accretion of the moss and lichen on the shingled roof. |
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That whatever might have been said en passant or adjectitiously, this was the ground on which the judgment below was rested. |
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We trust that we've relieved any Aibohphobia, any fear of palindromes that you might have harbored. |
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Had the US Navy icebreakers been unable to rescue them from the ice in early 1948 her child might have been the first native-born Antarctican. |
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Look, the benevolent overlord attitude might have gone a lot further for you back in the day, but don't even think you can use it on me. |
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A thousand times I berated myself for being drawn into such a trap as I might have known these pits easily could be. |
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If everybody got their deserts, Bulstrode might have had to say his prayers at Botany Bay. |
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The look of hurt fury which she hurled at the Bishop's back might have singed his clerical broadcloth. |
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The Young Turks, as might have been expected, wrote in their customary flippant, cheeky style. |
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I wondered which next superstar I might have the privilege of seeing live at the coalface of stardom in Hollywood. |
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You might have satisfied every duty of political friendship, without committing the honour of your sovereign. |
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The movement has long attempted to secure conference-goer feedback, and it might have noticed mounting opposition to the fee. |
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Milov might have tried 15... b4 to give himself some counterplay on the queenside. |
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Once again she had been stricken, beaten down, so violated that to give utterance to her feelings might have outshrilled all the criers in hell. |
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If, as she hinted, Dr Serrou had spent the night with Bachelet, the inexplicable brainstorm might have stemmed from a crime passionel. |
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A flurry of darker, less effective cyberthrillers in the 1990s might have landed too soon. |
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I might have to break up with Nora, she has serious daddy issues that she need to sort out before dating anyone again. |
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Buckingham might have mimicked the pedantry of his manners, and Coventry have complained of his interminable dawdlings and delays. |
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He was not to be done, at his time of life, by frivolous offers of a compromise that might have secured him seventy-five per cent. |
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If he felt obliged to expostulate, he might have dressed his censures in a kinder form. |
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The speech might have been electrifying close up, Mr. Conley said, but people near him drifted away before it finished. |
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The NATO visitors watched an ersatz eighteenth-century dance that might have been considered obscene had it not been so amusing. |
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Another Sprint employee speculated that someone might have fatfingered the keyboard. |
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More might have been achieved had OKL exploited the vulnerability of British sea communications. |
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This was one flirty dress. Way too sultry for a first date, especially with someone she might have no real interest in. |
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Certain cards place other cards here because such cards might have abilities deemed too strong if they sent them to the graveyard instead. |
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It might have been better in the House if you were still there, but I am glad you are here taking a hindlook at this. |
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In writing the work, Tacitus might have wanted to stress the dangers that the Germanic tribes posed to the Empire. |
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Spores might have gotten into its stomach while grazing for the first few times. |
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Also, it is thought that Late Paleolithic and Mesolithic human hunters might have affected the size of the last mammoth populations in Europe. |
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Stone tools were used by perhaps as many as hundreds of people to create the pillars, which might have supported roofs. |
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Hoards have been found, particularly around the West Kent coast, that might have been wealth hidden from the Vikings. |
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They were labouring under a profound, and, as it might have seemed, an almost incurable ignorance. |
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This arrangement was quite unusual in terms of medieval law, as Conan might have had sons who could have legitimately inherited the duchy. |
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There were rumors that Eleanor might have encouraged her sons to revolt against their father. |
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Edward III was not a statesman, though he possessed some qualifications which might have made him a successful one. |
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An ordinary soldier might have died from such a wound, but Henry had the benefit of the best possible care. |
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The manual might have been instructional had anybody actually taken the time to read it. |
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They came nowhere near to freeing Mary Stuart, whose presence might have rallied support, from her imprisonment in Tutbury. |
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Eventually, Charles apparently conquered his physical infirmity, which might have been caused by rickets. |
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Smith was so impressed with his ideas that he might have dedicated The Wealth of Nations to Quesnay had he not died beforehand. |
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The shooter was caught and imprisoned, but doubts remain about who the mastermind might have been. |
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She had looked at him with sad intensity in the eyes, as if trying to fathom any nether thought that he might have. |
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A typical bank had fairly limited capital, and often only one principal, though a bank might have as many as six to fifteen principals. |
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Elite housing in cooler climates might have hypocausts, a form of central heating. |
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They were noted in the First Grammatical Treatise, and otherwise might have remained unknown. |
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By the time of his death, the Scottish monarchy was stronger, and the kingdom and royal finances more prosperous than might have seemed possible. |
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However, he thought Whitehouse no fool and suspected that he might have the practical skill to make the existing design work. |
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Although it might have been possible to proceed against the king as against any other, the laws also had an innovative solution to this quandary. |
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The accused's responsibility for causing death is constructed from the fault in committing what might have been a minor criminal act. |
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The nonextrapolation to zero in the upper plot might have resulted from systematic experimental error in the grid measurements. |
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Perhaps the number of children who committed crimes might have been reduced if the standards of living had been higher. |
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Chanderpaul's obduracy might have broken lesser men, but Panesar more than matched him for relentlessness. |
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In 1995, however, a large and ornate 5th century building on Tower Hill was excavated, which might have been the city's cathedral. |
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While it might have been possible to reconstruct it, a decision was taken to build a new cathedral in a modern style. |
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A form was distinguished by being shared by all its members, the young inheriting any variations they might have from their parents. |
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Hydrogen sulfide levels might have increased dramatically over a few hundred years. |
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Seasonal freezing of the ground in the Lesotho Highlands might have reached depths of 2 meter or more below the surface. |
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The might have been avoided had not the issues of Korea and Manchuria became linked. |
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However, the raid might have led to disaster had the additional forces under Beatty not been sent by Admiral John Jellicoe at the last minute. |
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They failed to keep their ships together so they might have better odds in any engagement. |
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There was no way to warn off British submarines which might have targeted their own ships. |
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Had he not repeatedly clashed with the commander of the land expedition, the force might have captured poorly defended Belfast. |
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D'Este and Blumenson wrote that Montgomery and Harry Crerar might have done more to impart momentum to the British and Canadians. |
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Although Patton might have spun a line across the narrow neck, I doubted his ability to hold it. |
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The enemy could not only have broken through, but he might have trampled Patton's position in the onrush. |
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Reasoning in an opposite way, the continents might have shifted and rotated, while the pole remained relatively fixed. |
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World War I might have continued indefinitely if not for a pandemic outbreak of influenza. |
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Homer's Daughter by Robert Graves is a novel imagining how the version we have might have been invented out of older tales. |
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Furs might have served as a currency and may have been traded to some degree, but this is speculation. |
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Most families owned slaves as household servants and laborers, and even poor families might have owned a few slaves. |
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It has been remarked that Germanic language speakers might have been no closer than the river Elbe in the time of Caesar. |
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Perhaps an extra step in one of those directions might have seen me celebrated rather than notorious. |
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There are only hide scrapers, which might have been used to make blankets or ponchos. |
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In fact, the term Warini might have been used for all Germanic tribes outside the realm of the Franks. |
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But it remains unclear which Belgic Gauls were considered Germani ancestry and which, if any, might have spoken a Germanic language. |
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The common people, who comprised the rank and file of the army, the peasants and artisans, might have been called capillati in Latin. |
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For most of them, we do not have any idea as to what their Celtic names might have been, with one or two possible exceptions. |
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This event might have prompted the annexation of the Nabataean kingdom, but the manner and the formal reasons for the annexation are unclear. |
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After yards of Pinterish dialogue they announce that I'm here, but since they don't know me, they might have had to lock me out of my room. |
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What might have been acceptable in the fifth century had become provoking and insulting to the Franks in the eighth century. |
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The air among the houses was of so strong a piscatory flavour that one might have supposed sick fish went up to be dipped in it. |
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This might have attracted Rus' movements, and a shift in power, from the north to Kiev. |
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Unifying various states into one nation required more than some military victories, however much these might have boosted morale. |
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There are even some sources that claim some of the treasure ships might have been as long as 600 feet. |
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But scientists argue that the 'khorin' might have been a diversion of the word 'khurem' which means castle in Mongolian. |
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They might have split 24 years ago, but the Smiths remain as popular as ever, and not just among those who remember them first time around. |
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Had he stayed in office longer, the pontiff might have had more success in the enactment of these reforms. |
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Artificial prebiotic experiments were designed to mimic what might have occurred before life appeared. |
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They were approached by Calusa, who might have been initially interested in trading but relations soon turned hostile. |
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Reports suggest that some of the missing might have been murdered en masse by drowning in the White Sea. |
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The Brethren were renowned for their scriptorium and here Mercator might have encountered the italic script which he employed in his later work. |
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These laws might have paved the way to removing the worst of the poverty during the previous regimes. |
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So although domestic wages remained higher, they did not grow nearly as fast as they might have otherwise. |
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As a result of problems that he might have had, Wanli could not rule the dynasty in the right way. |
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Thus, might have to is acceptable, but might must is not, even though must and have to can normally be used interchangeably. |
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There are many different Egyptian hieroglyphs that might have inspired this. |
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He raised the question of conflicting loyalties which communities might have, cultural, religious and civic. |
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That the person might have had a clearly articulated political motive to protest such testing does not affect liability. |
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This might have reinvigorated the rebellion but the Central India Field Force very quickly advanced against the city. |
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These translations might have later inspired Daniel Defoe to write Robinson Crusoe, regarded as the first novel in English. |
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Whereas the entrepreneur might have philanthropic intentions as their main driving force. |
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If the break happened on the winding stroke the spindle might have to be stopped while the thread was found. |
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Patients can be lethargic, and might have sunken eyes, dry mouth, cold clammy skin, or wrinkled hands and feet. |
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This designation might have been first used in the early 20th century by Brookman, an English pencil maker. |
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Settlements might have a surrounding stone wall to keep domesticated animals in and protect the inhabitants from other tribes. |
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Lee's wait was ruthfully short, although he might have traded the first news that reached him for a return to uncertainty. |
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Finally, Josiah might have made his salaam to the exciseman just as he was folding up that letter. |
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He's haunted, she thought. And from the look of things, this is one ghost that even our little Scooby Gang might have trouble getting rid of. |
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When you start scrambling eggs, look first for tiny pieces of eggshell that might have fallen in. |
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I looked up, and there was a shrimpy little kid standing next to the rock, carrying a backpack that might have weighed more than he did. |
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Had Corporal Jones produced his orders early on, we all might have been spared a lamentable squanderation of much-needed time. |
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He might have made a good doctor, had he not been so squeamish about the sight of blood. |
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My foundation might have lasted fractionally longer than usual, but honestly it was a thing of nothing. |
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But for the sudden making in of Damian to our rescue, it is undescribable to think what might have come of us. |
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And God's declared design in all this is, that the heirs of the promises might have an undoubting hope. |
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Had the vessel been left unscuttled, a heavy gale of wind, and dash of the waves might have preserved some portions of her hull and of the cargo. |
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We might have spared ourselves the trouble, and our forty oxen remained unslaughtered. |
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Jimmy's mother was concerned that he might have fallen in with the wrong crowd. |
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Further, the finding of these vole PyVs may suggest that the wukipolyomavirus ancestor might have existed in a rodent-like animal. |
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I was doing a bit of yak shaving this morning, and it looks like it might have paid off. |
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At first, Morris was flustered and anxious that others in the class might have witnessed her, mid-yogasm. |
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Given Frank's bankerly appearance, one might have expected him to be a somewhat stern and formidable personality. |
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For all her face betrayed, the organ might have been singing an ave Maria. |
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Or he might have been inspired by Fulk Fitz Warine of Shropshire, or a Robin from Sussex, or another in Lancashire. |
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Do staff members have stock options that might have an acceleration clause regarding certain events such as a change of control? |
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It is utterly ahistorical to suggest that he might have privileged the expressive culture belonging to Afro-American slavery. |
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Without a plausible explanation for what might have provoked an ice age, the whole theory fell into abeyance. |
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We might have bypassed the ignorant masses in favor of an enlightened few. |
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Richardson's wrister sailed past Roloson, whose view might have been partially obstructed by an Islanders defenseman in front of the net. |
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Shrews started sluggishly and might have fallen behind in the second minute when Charlie Wyke scuffed wide. |
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You might have suspected it when you saw Mitch and cam get married. |
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How prices have gone through the roof yada yada yada, how we might have to move to up-and-coming areas blah blah blah. |
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Also, since cocaine can cause mammals to become anorexic, he also wondered what effect cocaine might have on insect feeding behavior. |
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They might have a higher economy rate but chances of bowling jaffas are higher up there. |
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The guys coming in now are more free spirited, they might have a higher economy rate but chances of them bowling jaffas are higher. |
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Daly might have had a double on the night, having been ready to stand in on Morris's winner Alabama Wurley, who caused a 14-1 upset in the seller. |
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In the artist's style, what might have been a sedate tabletop scene is enlivened by altercating primates, themselves joined by hostile feline intruders. |
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These special interests are citizens who might have been left out by the electorate during the course of elections or did not enter as candidates. |
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The theory was breath-catching, but quickly fell apart when the accountant could give no account of what Sibyl might have done with Theresa's body. |
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Anne became his heir apparent, since any children he might have by another wife were assigned to a lower place in the line of succession, and the two reconciled publicly. |
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Enough for a bit of jankers you might have thought, even though he looked resplendent in his uniform as Air Commodore in Chief of the New Zealand Air Force. |
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She hardly, she said, believed her own senses. You might have knocked her down with a feather. She did not know whether she stood on her head or her heels. |
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In Wordsworth's first preludings there is but a dim foreboding of the creator of an era. From Southey's early poems, a safer augury might have been drawn. |
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The society might have a doctor whom the member could consult for free. |
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Science as we know it today, and the original theories that we base modern science on, was built by males, regardless of the input women might have made. |
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Instead, it is suggested by Strawson that Hume might have been answering an epistemological question about the causal origin of our concept of the self. |
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Neither good nor evil exactly, he is the ultimate catalyst or kibitzer, a blue-note howl of pain and laughter such as Charlie Parker might have blown. |
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Sandra Lerner's sequel to Pride and Prejudice, Second Impressions, develops the story and imagined what might have happened to the original novel's characters. |
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The deteriorating climate in Scandinavia around 850 BC, that further deteriorated around 650 BC, might have triggered migration of Germanic tribes from the North. |
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Many times if the rhexis is incomplete, one might have to convert to an extracapsular cataract extraction to prevent a posterior capsular rupture or nucleus drop. |
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He thought this might have been the reason for the removal of Beria. |
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He might have spent the hours camped under the trees of the more remote meadow, whence in the brilliant moonlight he could keep tabs on the trails. |
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Next in the line of succession was Mary II's sister, Princess Anne, and her issue, followed by any children William might have had by a subsequent marriage. |
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Campaigns like Edward I of England's wars in Wales might have provided a good opportunity for a younger son of a landholder to become a mercenary soldier. |
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It seemed to him a possibility that the Cold War Corps of March might have contacted hitherto unknown sapients on some just discovered interstellar planet. |
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The Protectorate might have continued if Cromwell's son Richard, who was made Lord Protector on his father's death, had been capable of carrying on his father's policies. |
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In any event he might have wakened the long scrag by so doing. |
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The result is a nondogmatic message movie that won't offend anyone buying a ticket to yuk it up but might have a deeper meaning for anyone wishing to reflect on the themes. |
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Hinting at sexual extravagance might have caused outrage and disgust in the mid 1800s, but in the shagtastic twenty-first century, it's a certificate of honour. |
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Had Wilkinson not succeeded in this and also drawn support from influential parliamentarians, the bridge might not have been built or might have been made of other materials. |
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Who keeps their sovereign from the lapse of error, in which, by ignorance and not by intent they might have fallen, what thank they deserve, we know, though you may guess. |
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In August 1883, Janey would be introduced to the poet Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, with whom she embarked on a second affair, which Morris might have been aware of. |
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At that time you might have had dessert sets which had different patterns on each plate, but for the traditional tableware setting, everything had to match. |
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I had a sonder, a realization that the random girl sitting next to me inside of Starbucks might have a fantastic life or she might be dealing with a very ill family member. |
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I might have expected you to forget. It's our first monthiversary! |
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They also provided elegies, devotional poetry, commemorated the generous acts of their patrons and satirised certain people in verses which might have the intensity of curses. |
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The support she might have expected from a grateful Pope was thus denied. |
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Robertson might have condemned genocide on television, but off air, he carefully built a working relationship with Zairian dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. |
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Many books on religion, philosophy and science that might have been deemed controversial abroad were printed in the Netherlands and secretly exported to other countries. |
|
It might have contained up to 500 houses, with about 3,000 people. |
|
During the promotion season in 2003-2004 they managed a series of results that, if it were not for a local eagle-eyed statto type, might have gone unnoticed. |
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It is however likely that the carvings, like those on the Oseberg ship, might have had a ritual purpose, or that the purported effect was to frighten enemies and townspeople. |
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Although this invitation was accompanied with a curtsey that might have softened the heart of a church-warden, it by no means mollified the beadle. |
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Henry strongly wanted a male heir, and many of his subjects might have agreed, if only because they wanted to avoid another dynastic conflict like the Wars of the Roses. |
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Though the plague might have arrived independently at Bristol at a later point, the Grey Friars' Chronicle is considered the most authoritative account. |
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He also suggested that the people living there might have been from Ireland, Scotland or Scandinavia, possibly with groups from all three areas settling there. |
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His question is a toughie. I might have to do some more research. |
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The fleet of defeated France, one of the most powerful and modern in the world, might have tipped the balance against Britain if it had been captured by the Germans. |
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Their exit from the tournament, without a set between them yesterday, at least demonstrated that the women's game is not quite the turkey shoot it might have seemed. |
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In this sense it is now not used. Adam, in innocence, might have held, by the continued influx of the divine will and power, a state of immortality. |
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Spike Milligan later noted that Sellers was very proficient on the drums and might have remained a jazz drummer, had he lacked his skills in mimicry and improvisation. |
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Edwin might have fled England after an unsuccessful rebellion against his brother's rule, and his death probably helped put an end to Winchester's opposition. |
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Collector's Guide to the Zeolite Group might have been intended to reach mineral collectors, but it's also recommended here so that it reaches any with an interest in geology. |
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However, the bird does not occur in Africa, except perhaps in Linnaeus' time in Mediterranean coastal areas where they might have been introduced during the Roman Empire. |
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This has led to speculation that, if life ever occurred on Mars, it might have looked similar to Antarctic fungi such as Cryomyces antarcticus, and Cryomyces minteri. |
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This Romanisation might have occurred anyway without the Synod of Whitby. |
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However, there is no consensus on which expedition that might have been. |
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Three decades later, when Earth's magnetic field was better understood, theories were advanced suggesting that the Earth's field might have reversed in the remote past. |
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After a dreadful performance in the opening 45 minutes, they upped their game after the break and might have taken at least a point from the match. |
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Had Northerners realized that most Southerners really did favor secession, they might have hesitated at attempting the enormous task of conquering a united South. |
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His features might have been called good, had there not lurked under the pent-house of his eye, that sly epicurean twinkle which indicates the cautious voluptuary. |
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Some scholars believe Ovid's Pyramus and Thisbe, as well as the story of Ariadne at Naxos might have also contributed to the development of the Tristan legend. |
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These conditions might have been the effect of the Little Ice Age. |
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Work in analogous situations in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica, suggests that the ice surface altitude over the mountains might have been around 800m lower than predicted. |
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Permission is only required if the sui generis use is materially different from the existing one, such as from a petrol station where petrol tanks might have leaked. |
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I'm not quite sure in what context I might have made such a statement. |
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Ultrasound is inaudible to birds and reptiles, which might have been important during the Mesozoic, when birds and reptiles were the dominant predators. |
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His trailer weighed in lighter than it should have. He might have a leak. |
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I don't know how long it might have gone on if Grandfather hadn't lost his temper. He swung the bridle up over his head and whanged it down across the buckskin's rump. |
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The absence of feet has led to suggestions that the figures might have been made to stand upright by inserting the legs into the ground like a peg. |
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The Antonine Plague had severely thinned the senatorial ranks, and with capable men now in short supply, Severus' career advanced more steadily than it otherwise might have. |
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At most, the accused might have to pay a fine for killing a slave. |
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Wightman tentatively suggests that the pagus Vilcias might have been the western region around Arlon and Longuyon, and the pagus Teucorias the southern region around Tholey. |
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There is some evidence that the Pictish language may have had close ties to Common Brittonic, and might have been either a sister language or a fifth branch. |
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I trusted that I might have had other glad meetings and pleasant communings with my honoured and honourworthy father in this world, but it was not so appointed. |
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It might have just meant that she did not receive a formal education because, in the Middle Ages, formal education was rarely available to laywomen. |
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The fact that the scheme was restricted to Italy suggests that it might have been conceived as a form of political privilege accorded to the original heartland of the empire. |
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Captives might have their throats cut and be bled into giant cauldrons or have their intestines opened up and the entrails thrown to the ground for prophetic readings. |
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Moreover, the oldest of these remains might have no relation at all to the Algonquin or Iroquois, and belong to an earlier culture who previously inhabited the area. |
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These negotiations might have succeeded had it not been for the influence of another Goth, Sarus, an Amali, and therefore hereditary enemy of Alaric and his house. |
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He was prudent and industrious, and so good a husbandman, that he might have led a very easy and comfortable life, had not an arrant vixen of a wife soured his domestic quiet. |
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All of these things led them to suspect that manelessness was typical in some parts of Kenya and might have been widespread in Africa many decades ago. |
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