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English
Etymology
From might + be. Compare might-have-been, would-be.
Adjective
might-be (not comparable)
- That might be or occur; possible; potential; hypothetical.
1998, John Cramer, Einstein's Bridge:"There is a might-be particle called a 'magnetic monopole' that was suggested by certain theories of Dirac and others but had never been observed.
Noun
might-be (plural might-bes)
- That which might be or happen; a possibility.
1973, Institute of Biology, Journal of biological education:In the Biology Teachers'" Handbook (Wiley, 1963), Schwab writes: A hypothesis is a "might be", a possibility which we intend to test . . . one of the values of a hypothesis consists in the fact that it can be made to point like an arrow
1983, Tasso Borbé, Semiotics unfolding:Firstness comprises anything capable of being described without contradiction (2.667), it is a might-be, in other words, pure possibility, which Peirce calls "quality": "mere quality, or suchness, is not in itself an occurrence, as seeing a red object is; it is a mere may-be.
1991, Floyd Merrell, Signs becoming signs: our perfusive, pervasive universe:It is a might be, a mere possibility from the tossing ocean of pure chance.
2010, Tony Fry, Design as Politics:Context two is a 'might be' and is futural and nameable as 'the desired'.