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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'may not to' is not correct and not usable in written English.
You should use the phrase 'may not' instead. For example: We may not go to the party if it rains.
Exact(54)
Merlin may not to oblige Barclays chairman Marcus Agius to explain that fact.
In that sense, property taxes are one piece of a complex personal financial picture, and what may seem affordable to some may not to others.
Shrewsbury may not, to some of its inhabitants' chagrin, attract quite the swarms that descend on, say, Stratford, or Chester, or Warwick, or York, but it does not do too badly.
Small charities may not to have a rolling programme of campaigns in the way a national campaigning charity might, but threats or opportunities can arise that necessitate a campaign response.
But that may not to be the case with WellPoint's acquisition of Amerigroup, which is more likely to have regulatory problems and thus draft a more finely tuned clause to deal with this issue.
The slate of retail policy may not, to many on the left, look equivalent in scale to the mission of rewriting Britain's social and economic order – a higher minimum wage, apprenticeships, a gentler trajectory of budget consolidation to protect public services, more midwives, free nursery places and nurses.
Similar(5)
He may not have to.
They may not need to.
Market speculators may not agree to wait.
They may not want to think so.
But he may not need to be.
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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