Example sentences of "would have in " in BNC.

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1 She had , after all , done her homework as thoroughly — if anything more thoroughly — than she would have in order to realise either of those goals .
2 A prime example of this is the genuine difficulty any Pope would have in recognising that Anglican priests are real priests since this would mean that when Pope Leo XIII declared in 1896 that Anglican orders were ‘ utterly null and void ’ , he was either silly or wrong or both .
3 In this respect Locke is not an empiricist : he does not think that geometrical knowledge or , for that matter , the knowledge we would have in natural philosophy if we knew the real essences of substances , is empty and trivial .
4 The poll highlights the problems Labour would have in raising business confidence .
5 A court might also take into account your salary level , skill and qualifications , together with , possibly , the difficulty that you would have in finding another suitable post .
6 A court might also take into account your salary level , skill and qualifications , together with , possibly , the difficulty that you would have in finding another suitable post .
7 For this reason , much of the incentive provided to schemes in the south ( and to retail schemes virtually everywhere ) was unnecessary — the projects would have in any case gone ahead .
8 Often , when considering a trust , the jurist 's interpretation regards intention no more than it would have in the case of a legacy .
9 ( We would have in mind issues such as conservation of national resources , self-reliance , population education , health priorities , concepts of nationhood and the use of appropriate locally based technology . ) ’
10 If you think that sounds like the sort of luxury only the likes of Joan Collins would have in her bathroom , you 'd be wrong .
11 infer the thoughts and feelings which men would have in a particular situation if they were able to assess both it and the interests arising from it in their impact on immediate action and the whole structure of society .
12 It was an indication of the great difficulty the European idea would have in achieving concerted action in even a single economic sector , and suggested that the recently established and broader European Economic Community of 1957 would not find it easy to secure its broad objectives of common policies and a common market .
13 I tried to explore the problems Mrs Singh would have in attempting to be a fully participating parent but the educational psychologist seemed to feel that this was a problem common to many Cedars parents .
14 Neville , however , pressed on him the support in the country that he would bring to such an administration and the effect it would have in restoring confidence .
15 If the Conservatives ' list vote were no more than 50% , the system would still work smoothly : they would have in addition to their 53 constituency seats just one list seat , giving them their due total of 54 .
16 Delete any information which you think the two children would have in common .
17 Better Schools indicated the duty the governors would have in determining the curricular aims and objectives , and subsequent Education Acts have put this into legislation .
18 This suggests a definition of culture that is closer to what many social scientists and cultural theorists would have in mind when they talk about culture than the versions associated with either multiculturalism or antiracism .
19 Was he thinking about the oats he would have in the morning ?
20 Yeah , I would have in the first place , but it was just impossible !
21 He imagined , with pleasure , the unusual difficulty Colonel Moore would have in presenting his defeat to Miss D'Arcy .
22 Tongues solicitously tutted over the black band still stitched to Melanie 's sleeve for they all ( as they would have in the village ) knew of the children 's arrival and how they had been orphaned .
23 The one-to-one teaching usually meant that they learned more and did better than they would have in the classroom .
24 Although the unit obviously benefits girls who have tended either not to do very well in school , or who were regular truants , there is a tendency for more scholastically-minded girls to do worse educationally than they would have in school .
25 Neville , however , pressed on him the support in the country that he would bring to such an administration , and the effect it would have in restoring confidence .
26 Depending on the rules of the language the stress on a word may disappear completely , as in " The Student body is very active " , where " body " has lost the stress it would have in " My body is aching all over " .
27 Only the thought of the pleasure she would have in telling him off when he told them they were not welcome in Spain kept her seated and in any way civilised .
28 A swift picture of the sort of women he would have in his bed sprang unasked into her mind .
29 Making risk assessments while they were driving may have caused drivers to think about risks in the situations to a greater extent than they would have in the course of normal driving .
30 Consequently , a predicative structure combining a noun and an adjective related to it associatively will either seem unacceptable , as in : ( 20 ) the visiting scientists are nuclear or , at best , demand of the adjective a different meaning ( if one is available ) from the associative one that it would have in the attributive position .
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