Example sentences of "that [noun] would " in BNC.
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1 | Yet I 'm in no doubt at all that Ian would have provided the most engrossing portrait of all . |
2 | We judged that Stirling would need the wider bandwidth of 10 Mbps for the more sophisticated applications of the 90s . |
3 | .. Then there swam pleasantly into her muddled mind the recollection that Jerome would never have anything to say about anything again , never drive at eighty-five or pick on Nora or do those other terrible and humiliating things . |
4 | This is not because it can be proved one way or the other that either or neither version is the type of play that Marlowe would have written . |
5 | What they hoped for was a future that Swindon would begin , then get league racing and that it would go on forever . |
6 | The Captain was aware that at this stage she was still sufficiently frightened by what had happened to her to be hiding something , but experience told him that U would be useless to try and force her . |
7 | Both Labour and Conservative Governments had taken the view that change would cause a fierce political storm , so no one did anything . |
8 | He was certain that Scarlet would never behave so irrationally but could not quite rid himself of the image of the breakfast table . |
9 | The PSI deputies had declared that Rodota would not receive their votes . |
10 | I have tried to er persuade him that , that Colin would be good for that job . |
11 | In the case of mapping theses , it is logical to assume that researchers would be interested in adjacent areas , or in areas within the same major structural or stratigraphic units . |
12 | At about the second hour of day I was told that Kenamun would be leading the investigation . |
13 | When I 'd had confirmation that permission would be granted for one dwelling , no size specified , I toured round the estate agents , seeking a prospective purchaser . ’ |
14 | In response to criticism that SCS would be damaged by amalgamation with the smaller and less successful Edmonton Society , he argued that the SCS |
15 | Hardy had said it would — not that Denis would believe a word from Hardy , even if he was the unit Officer-in-Command . |
16 | She should have anticipated that Patrick would try to get some sort of message to Senga — they had always been very close . |
17 | County Nat West oil analyst Neil Thomas said that decision would be affected by anger over the planned closure of nearby Point of Ayr colliery . |
18 | But to make certain that MacDonald would be chosen , he had to be sure of his own party and the Liberals . |
19 | I mean who would have thought that Tranmere would have lost four nil ? |
20 | It was easy , however , to discount this evidence at a time when opinion polls were in their infancy , at least so far as credibility was concerned , and when it was universally thought that support would return to Churchill as soon as his formidable oratorical skills were thrown in on one side of the party contest . |
21 | Heaven only knew what reaction that admission would provoke . |
22 | You could use the same monitor for either , so it is quite conceivable that institutions would in the future include both among their video equipment . |
23 | One major principle of unit cost funding is that institutions would be treated equally according to some notion of the cost of their lecturers per student . |
24 | Love managed his second successive 68 , adding : ‘ We were warned that play would be slow here but I could n't believe it would take six hours . |
25 | The correspondence , leaked to Labour 's Trade spokesman , Mr Gordon Brown , discloses for the first time that Lord Young appeared to plan with Professor Roland Smith , chairman of British Aerospace , to hide the figures rather than simply leaving the information to be ‘ scattered ’ in obscure documents in the hope that Parliament would not notice it . |
26 | They might be , predictably , so unpopular that Parliament would not pass them in the first place . |
27 | In late November Mr Clarke outlined three options that Parliament would be invited to consider in a free vote : total deregulation ( as in Scotland ) ; deregulation for small shops and partial deregulation for larger shops ( as proposed by the Shopping Hours Reform Council ) ; and exemption from the general prohibition on trading for certain classes of shop — recreation , emergencies , social gatherings and travel ( proposed by the Keep Sunday Special Campaign ) . |
28 | One of the better songs , ‘ Sweet Sentiment 's Pet ’ , showed enormous flair for improvising irresistibly improbable rhymes : The final verse , a sort of policy recommendation , advocated the remedy that parliament would so readily agree to in the ensuing months ; one that was ‘ cheapest and quickest and best ’ : |
29 | It has been argued that these have been entrenched as , in terms of the political realities of the situation , it is inconceivable that Parliament would repeal them . |
30 | ‘ Many statutes are passed by political bargaining and snap judgments of expediency ; the courts can rarely be sure that Parliament would have altered the wording if it had foreseen the situation . ’ |