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Exact(51)
Similar reasoning applies to any other property that a may have (or, in the case of the Williams argument, that the sample may have), such as having been observed or being in the past.
Such disclosures rarely bring to light the real conflicts that a candidate may have or, more important, those that a candidate once in office will seek to exploit.
The airlines and the Federal Aviation Administration rely on pilots to voluntarily disclose any physical or mental health problems they may have or medication they are taking.
Where before she was certain of Pepys's actions, she must now reckon that he "would have" or "may have" or "could have" done something.
In 1449, the city council of Toledo, Spain, passed an ordinance decreeing "that no converso of Jewish descent may have or hold any office or benefice in the said city of Toledo".
"Whatever frustrations she may have, or that exist with the campaign and the missteps, her commitment to our country and her reasons for running are her guiding force now," said Robert Zimmerman, a Democratic national committeeman from New York and a major fund-raiser for the campaign.
Similar(7)
The comparison between the MAYDRYVAIC motif and the second motif identified here suggests that the methionine (M), tyrosine (Y), and cysteine (C) residues are the most important components of this motif and may have OR-specific functions.
Mirrors may have plane or curved surfaces.
They may have forward or aft wheelhouses.
They may have more or less harms.
You may have acne or a mouth full of cavities.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com