Sentence examples for am which may from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "am which may" is not correct and usable in written English.
It appears to be a fragment and lacks clarity, making it difficult to determine its intended meaning or context.
Example: "I am which may lead to confusion." (Note: This example is still incorrect due to the phrase's structure.)
Alternatives: "I am that may" or "I am which could".

Exact(3)

I was 41…" That means he's eight years younger than I am, which may explain why his interpretations of facial hair tend toward generic notions of it as "a symbol of youthful rebellion," "the perfect retro-sportsman accessory," "freedom, the open road, 'Easy Rider,' " and other "rogue connotations".

In an attempt to establish Chandler's whereabouts on the night of the murders, investigators found records of several ship-to-shore telephone calls made from his boat to his home between 1 am and 5 am, which may have been attempts to explain his absence to his wife and to provide himself with an alibi for the time of the murders.

Both ROFA and CAP cause substantial intracellular oxidant stress within AM, which may contribute to subsequent cell activation and production of proinflammatory mediators.

Similar(57)

And both radicals and reactionaries (whichever side is which) may have to compromise.

Wasserstein's writing is often as chatty and accessible as she was, which may be why it was sometimes dismissed as middlebrow.

Lesser or equal, he is as meticulous as they were, which may be another part of how Armstrong became so dominant.

At the moment the shorter the game, the more confident Rashid appears to be, which may not be his ideal state of affairs.

(There are moments when Sartre sounds like Tony Robbins — only you can make you what you want to be! which may also have been, secretly, part of his appeal).

There is an assumption here that knowledge exists of what these properties are, which may not be entirely true.

But in the meantime, they have another iPhone app that is ready, and it's about as simple as can be which may be good thing.

Hamlet's greatest hit, Act III, Scene 1, "to be, or not to be," which may, or may not be, a soliloquy: Laurence Olivier, Hamlet (1948).

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