Sentence examples for may have be from inspiring English sources

"may have be" is not a grammatically correct phrase in standard written English
It should be "may have been," with the word "been" being the past participle form of the verb "to be." This phrase is typically used to express uncertainty or possibility about something that occurred in the past. For example: "He may have been at the gym yesterday" or "They may have been discussing the project before the meeting."

Exact(33)

In every room there may be someone who may have, be about to have or about to lose a billion.

It found some carbonates and clays, which suggest that liquid water may have be present within the past few millennia.

Defence psychiatrists conclude he was in a trance at the time of the shooting and leading psychiatrists suggest he may have be a hypnotically programmed assassin.

His death - and the precedent it has set - makes those fighting for Husseini fear that the judiciary in northern areas may have be sufficiently emboldened to push ahead regardless of opposition.

Remember the Dean scream?This means that Kerry may have be suffering from a cable age version of what Michael Dukakis endured in 1988, in the network news age.

While the chief execs may have be indifferent to the technical aspects of the PSBA, technology played its part in spurring the PSBA: take-up was undoubtedly given a push by the impending ends of network contracts such as the education sector's Lifelong Learning and health's Dawn2.

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Similar(27)

It may have been.

"It may have been fantasy.

She may have been thirteen.

That may have been foolish.

(Questions may have been edited).

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