Example sentences of "would have [det] " in BNC.

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1 Fortunately it did n't rain , otherwise they would 've all got very wet .
2 Oh you would n't go , well I would n't say that you could my father would 've half killed us
3 He thought aspects of the Anglo-Catholic movement had danger ; and that though Ramsey was not a danger , he would have such sympathy with them as not to be vigilant .
4 The position now is that in any proceedings , ‘ the court may refuse to allow evidence … if it appears to the court that , having regard to all the circumstances , including the circumstances in which the evidence was obtained , the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it ’ ( section 78 ) .
5 It was recognised of course that not everyone would have such a carer , but that this restriction would provide a more homogeneous sample than would otherwise be the case .
6 She could n't believe this cheerful bird would have such mournful habits .
7 But over time all regions would have such magistrates .
8 Wages did not rise in proportion , and by the Spring of 1795 there was the extensive distress and threat of mass starvation which led , in May , to the infamous meeting of the magistrates at Speenhamland in Berkshire , an event which would have such an impact on poor-law provision for the next few decades .
9 Brophy however insisted that if test-tube fusion holds up it would have such a major impact on society that ‘ Sometimes one has more responsibility to society than to the scientific community . ’
10 Instead under section 78 of the Act the courts have a power to exclude such evidence if it appears to the court that the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it .
11 ‘ having regard to all the circumstances , including the circumstances in which the evidence was obtained , the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it .
12 It sets out to achieve its objective of protection by promoting the kind of policies and practices which it believes would enable the rural environment to be utilised and developed for the good of society without destroying aesthetic and spiritual beauty , and by opposing other policies and practices which in its view would have such an effect .
13 On this assumption , a Cambridge don , John Michell , wrote a paper in 1783 in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London in which he pointed out that a star that was sufficiently massive and compact would have such a strong gravitational field that light could not escape : any light emitted from the surface of the star would be dragged back by the star 's gravitational attraction before it could get very far .
14 She had already fallen in love with him , her whole heart had been surrendered , but he could never know that because he would have such power over her that she would never be able to deny him her body .
15 ‘ Might n't I have known that she would have such perfect timing ? ’ turning to his mother , he explained , ‘ That 's what I was coming to tell you — that Phena was on her way .
16 He hoped that he would have such a success on the minimum wage .
17 Foam-breathing would have many uses , beginning with the use of oxygenated foam for instant well-being .
18 In Britain , Tin Machine 's imaginative brand of tense , futuristic grunge has regularly been the butt of the kind of vitriolic press coverage that would have many a younger , less experienced band pleading for their day jobs back .
19 A 500 gram cone of airy acrylic would have many more metres or yards of yarn on it than a 500 gram cone of much denser cotton .
20 A 500 gram cone of airy acrylic would have many more metres or yards of yarn on it than a 500 gram cone of much denser cotton .
21 A two-tier interest system would have many benefits .
22 He knew the Beadles well — they were very forceful and witty and Uncle would have many a fierce but friendly argument with them .
23 ’ If we were still in our own country , Andreas , a man like you would have been married years ago and you would have many children to delight you in your old age . ’
24 In their extreme forms , one type would preserve health authority responsibility for planning and meeting the needs of its population ( but would have many other problems ) , the other would make planning and the pursuit of local priorities impossible and co–lld probably not be operated with cash-limited budgets .
25 For example , topic work with time as its theme could offer scope for looking at ways in which we measure time , and would have many cross-curricular possibilities ( see Boxes 2 and 3 ) .
26 The main worry was whether I would have many players left for the play-offs through injury and suspension . ’
27 I can not imagine that the building societies would have many takers to that kind of practice .
28 An anonymous reviewer of the book in the Times Literary Supplement declared : ‘ If a student of British politics were to demand some precepts to guide his researches , the compiler would have little difficulty about the first and most significant maxim in the creed .
29 The CIGS , General ( later Field Marshal ) Sir Francis Festing , felt the price of Sandys ' Reformation was too high and considered resignation , but the other Chiefs would not support him , believing that such gestures would have little impact on a government that had the full support of Parliament and the electorate for its Defence policy .
30 Members of the conspiracy were themselves well aware in advance that their attempt would have little popular backing .
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