Examples of using Answer may in English and their translations into Arabic
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Colloquial
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Political
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
The answer may surprise you.
(Laughter)(Applause) The answer may surprise you.
The answer may shock you.
Is nicotine harmful to the body? The answer may surprise you.
The answer may surprise you.
People also translate
By taking a look at some of themore profound side effects about the fat-burner, that answer may be more clear.
The answer may surprise you.
So the question is, is it possible that the flow of blood occurring through your capillaries is automatically enhanced by exposure to light?It appears the answer may be yes.
The answer may surprise you.
New research conducted by Ruald Menegat, ageologist at the Brazilian Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, suggests that the answer may be directly related to these geological errors below the city.
The answer may surprise you.
We're impassioned with this idea that whatever you want to do, whether you want to replace a vein or a bone, or maybe be more sustainable in microelectronics, perhaps drink a coffee in a cup and throw it away without guilt, maybe carry your drugs in your pocket,deliver them inside your body or deliver them across the desert, the answer may be in a thread of silk.
The answer may surprise you.
So, if you have ever sat at somebody's deathbed, the answer may very well be yes: you sat at the deathbed of a statistical life.
The answer may be blowing in the wind.
Where, as here, the General Assembly has a legitimate interest in the answer to aquestion, the fact that that answer may turn, in part, on a decision of the Security Council is not sufficient to justify the Court in declining to give its opinion to the General Assembly.
The answer may surprise you… after the break.
I think the answer may be in Michelle's papers.
Your answer may fill people with joy their whole existence, or may exclude from it anything else.
Dan Hooper thinks the answer may be more complicated, that there may not be one Higgs boson but five.
The answer may lie in ensuring that IDPs are not forced to move but are free to move.
Viewed from the perspective of attribution, the answer may appear to be no; but if the question is viewed from the perspective of the State's responsibility to“provide justice”(i.e., not to deny justice to litigants), or from the perspective of the exhaustion of local remedies rule, the answer may appear less clear.
The answer might be something in viper's class.
I think the answer might be somewhere in the ruins of this old church.
The answer might not be some vague mystery out there.
If you survive, the answer might be there.
I suppose that answer might fly in the physics Department, but this is Neuroscience.
The answer might surprise you. More after the break.
I think the answer might be.
The answer might be there. I'm tired of sitting around and waiting!