Examples of using May make in English and their translations into Polish
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Colloquial
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Medicine
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Official/political
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Financial
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Programming
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Computer
Diarrhoea which may make you dehydrated.
In both cases, the court may make a decision in closed session.
High blood sugar may make you feel confused, drowsy, or thirsty.
The customer may make back-up copies.
The Committee may make its favourable opinion subject to such conditions as it considers essential.
The notifying parties may make only one such request.
They may make mistakes.
Member States may make prior consultation arrangements to apply the exclusion grounds.
Two free applications that may make using your PDA more practical.
They do not work properly and may make your system instable.
But S4 carries unique side effects that may make it better to skip.
Admission is free but may make a donation to the output.
Gadgets- Google may make available third-party applications through its services.
The Member State may make specific arrangements to enable purchasers to deduct this advance where producers deliver to several purchasers.
Absence may make the heart grow fonder,
The Commission may make such allocations in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 75 of Regulation(EC) No 1493/1999.
By way of exception to Article 65(6), the national regulatory authority may make some or all commitments binding for the entire period for which they are offered. ï.
A swift upturn in economic growth may make this target reachable by 2010, at least for the EU-15.
The Commission may make any adjustments to this Regulation that automatically follow from amendments made to the Financial Regulation
Either Party may make changes to its list by notifying the other Party in writing