Sentence examples for might superficially from inspiring English sources

Exact(14)

His own paintings might superficially resemble Abstract Expressionism, but the requisite emotion isn't there.

If somebody asked you whether life most resembles a novel or a play, you might superficially answer that it resembles the theater — with our families and friends as characters, our careers and conflicts and relationships as the action.

"I felt really strongly that Tina might superficially think that she wants the usual things – marriage, babies – but deep down in her core she's much more capricious and has a much stronger will than that.

These books all present interesting contradictions: while being exactly what they might superficially seem to be, unpretentious action novels with a strong streak of humour, they are also satirical, knowing, subversive, unapologetically anti-military, anti-authority and anti-violence.

They can, in short, ask any sort of question of the database.Metaweb is thus very different from commercial database software, such as that made by Oracle, and from Google Base, which might superficially appear similar because it too allows anybody to upload data.

And though the story might superficially resemble Awakenings (Marsan has said that if Hollywood ever makes the film, Robin Williams will probably get the part), a studied lack of sentimentality means it is tears of triumph (by far the more satisfying kind) that are shed along the way.

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Similar(46)

Though the parts might look superficially similar, "the way they would perform under firing would be totally unknown".

A British government policy paper on trade published last year said the principle of reciprocity might sound "superficially reasonable" but could open the door to protectionism.

But you see he is showing, as is Andy Burnham over in Manchester, they are showing loyalty to something which is beyond something that might seem superficially attractive at the moment.

In its crudest form, the notion is that an active sentence ("John loved Mary") and a passive sentence ("Mary was loved by John") might seem superficially different; yet they have some important underlying commonality, both in meaning and in their representation in the brain.

However, in most of the cases, this quantification might be superficially forced in the form of a modeling convenience.

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