Sentence examples for which may owe from inspiring English sources

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His choice of coupling is out of the ordinary, too – two of Prokofiev's early sets of pieces, which may owe more to Mussorgsky's example than first appears.

Already, it has been noted with some alarm that he has managed just one walk in fifty plate appearances, which may owe to his inexperience and early success, or may augur longer-term issues with discipline.

A barbarian captive of the second century A.D. bears a curious resemblance to early Baroque art, which may owe something to its zealous "restoration" at the hands of Pietro Bernini in the early 17th century.

But except for the two "Lara Croft" movies, which may owe their success more to Angelina Jolie than to their Tomb Raider provenance, the track record of movies based on video games is not uplifting.

The current value of the h-BNNSs without fluorination ranges from −300 to 300 nA (red, as shown by a magnified inset), which may owe to the indirect to direct bandgap transition[30].

As it was shown in Table 1, the handling capacity of substrate concentration increased threefold and the reaction velocity grew from 0.85 μmol/h per U of SMDH to 11.6 μmol/h per U of SMDH, which may owe to the improved stability of immobilized enzymes and the increase of mass transfer rate.

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The Siegels, as of this writing still in possession of their heads, were kept out of their stately pleasure dome by the invisible hand of the market, to which Ms. Greenfield may owe a story credit.

Given the lack of concrete data, although precaution should be advised, we shouldn't let some experts use science as a veil to cover any potential personal disapproval and disgust towards pre-mastication, a practice to which we may owe our nutritional heritage.

State officials have reported an unprecedented surge in last-minute registrations by new voters, which may also owe to the Sanders effect.

For the Morton sequence, it is the land of the Polylerites (CU: 71), whose ingenious system of penal servitude, which may well owe something to Plato's Laws (862D), aims to destroy the vices but save the persons, providing in the process reparation for their crimes.

WHEN Tiger Woods burst onto the global stage in 1997, The Economist was ecstatic NOT since Kim Jong Il's five holes-in-one on his first day on the links, which may have owed a little to the North Korean dictator's hagiographer, has golf seen anything like the feat achieved last week at the Masters tournament in Augusta, Georgia, by Eldrick "Tiger" Woods, a 21-year-old African-Thai-American-Indian.

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