Might in a sentence as a noun

The son then says, "Yeah, she thought it might be a tree falling on the house or a meteorite.

[2] Again, you might not mean to reference that when you use words like "brogrammer".

But it might require actual customer service; that must have made them think twice.

An employee might be able to be kicked to the curb, but you're not just an employee.

You might wonder "Well are we more risky than the same aggregate volume spread over N accounts?

I think Larry Tesler might have struck some kind of chord in Bezos when he said his mom couldn't use the goddamn website.

There were a lot of wacky ones around externalizing services, but not as many as you might think.

Make sure that you're also grabbing copies of emails off any servers/accounts they might have access to.

People have often speculated about how much cheaper launch services might be if they were in the private sector -- now we can find out. The preliminary signs are very good.

I mean, to us it might sound ridiculous to say that your country should matter more than your morality - and I mean secular morality here.

You might also consider merely greying out comments that have not yet been endorsed, as currently happens to down-voted comments.

It might be a junior analyst or a senior managing director,[1] but it's someone who does the work that makes the business money.

However much you might want to hear Alexander account for the activities of the NSA, the NSA itself is not the real oversight mechanism for the NSA!

Likewise, humans don't perceive colors exactly and that might add another layer that would diminish people comparing themselves so much and trying to score points.

And so it's just common sense that any such broad-based operations that might be perceived as impacting our constitutional rights should be the subject of broad public debate.

Capping at 12 would mean that both parties arguing might get the same public presentation of 00FF00 and that might quell the need for parties to prove that they're the winner of the argument by popular vote.

Modern testing and build systems might, but regulators aren't keen to change their testing systems, many of which were encoded by legislation decades ago.

If you are burned out, you might still be able to feel the joy and excitement briefly at the start of a project/idea, but they will fade quickly as the reality of day-to-day work sets in.

The new guy was arguably the most talented guy in the company by a considerable margin, so he thought someone building a $700K home might've been overextending themselves.

A teeny tiny sampling of these discoveries included:- pager escalation gets way harder, because a ticket might bounce through 20 service calls before the real owner is identified.

Paypal decisionmakers might at this point give Indiegogo the sort of look a school psychologist gives a C student with a drug habit who has just announced that they're taking a semester off to find themselves, man.

We respect that you might not agree with this, but don't feel the need to spend additional resources paying for our computer programmers, underwriters, lawyers, and accountants to give you an expensive education in the realities of e-commerce on our nickel.

Might definitions

noun

physical strength

See also: mightiness power