Dictionary
to might
noun
Power, strength, force or influence held by a person or group.
synonyms
Exact(58)
This strong nucleophile is prone to interact in vivo with electrophiles, and hence, the effective dose of TO might be much lower than originally anticipated.
She is also the woman mentioned above who indicated that a TO might have made her feel less feminine and whose partner had instead a vasectomy.
"Even if his office is not bugged, the person he's talking to might be," he said.
On the best connections, the person you're talking to might never know about your cheapskate tendencies.
This was modified by a speaker to "might possibly be one of her last performances".
Maxwell found metadata indicating that the public P.G.P. keys Wired and Gizmodo had referred to might have been backdated.
Asked whether those he would speak to might fear reprisals, he said: "I am sure there will be difficulties.
Yet you never know how pivotal to your success the next person you speak to might be.
They were then told that what they were listening to might not even be the final version of the album.
His anxiety went from "will I ever make it?" to "might I lose everything?" "I think I'm more fearful of the future now," he said, sipping his tea.
Similar(1)
Gao et al. [ 6] reported that Juzen-taiho-to, Hochu-ekki-to, Shofu-san and Oren-gedoku-to might correct the Th1/Th2 balance skewed to Th2, and thus inhibit dermatitis in NC/Nga mice.
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