Sentence examples for may most often from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

This may most often be the case for transfers between distantly related groups that do not share physiological mechanisms for gene exchange.

Although clinical review suggests that the mechanism of cerebral dysfunction following critical illness may most often be related to hypoxia and hypo-perfusion, other factors, such as metabolic encephalopathy, delirium, and embolic phenomena, have also been implicated [ 1, 3].

Similar(58)

So, for example, while rheumatic fever with congenital involvement may be most often associated with communicable disease genesis, we cannot rule out that parental chemical exposure may be associated with predispositions to certain illnesses [ 30].

But the rate for property crime, the kind that people may experience most often, increased in the state, to 4,082 per 100,000 residents in 2008 from 3,682 in 2000.

The prolific Hurston -- she wrote novels, stories, folk tales, plays and essays -- may be most often associated with the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920's, but she was a highly inventive quick-change artist, this sampling of nearly 500 letters suggests.

Chest discomfort or pain, rapid heart beat, difficulty catching the breath or shortness of breath may occur, most often because the heart is struggling to pump blood against such high pressures.

With development of potassiaemia arrhythmia may even be developed that most often may be of supraventricular origin but sudden cardiac death is reported in rowers.

Beethoven's Sonata in E (Op. 109) may be the most often played of his late piano works.

But with 200 performances scheduled for this year alone, her "Tosca" may become the most often performed opera production ever in Italy, albeit without a costly cast and orchestra in a theater seating thousands.

Cups and swords may be linked most often in the tarot deck, but they'll be together in a different context in California wine country in a few weeks.

Motives for nonacceptance may vary, but most often the reason has been external pressure; for example, in 1937 Adolf Hitler forbade Germans in the future from accepting Nobel Prizes because he had been infuriated by the award of the 1935 Peace Prize to the anti-Nazi journalist Carl von Ossietzky, who at the time was a political prisoner in Germany.

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