Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] would make [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There is only one thing to say about the Home Secretary 's speech : I have heard more intellectual contributions from Lord Waddington on the subject , and I never believed that I would make that statement about anyone holding the office of Home Secretary .
2 It was , I thought , the last time that she would make sarky remarks about a fellow medium 's performance .
3 I mean , I think , I had n't realized that they would make different decisions on medical grounds .
4 In practice one suspects that it would make little sense to the participants in any of these cases to ask who is really being supported : .
5 One view holds it might be worth preserving only information derived from the telecommunications record , but that it would make little sense to keep it all .
6 A moment 's reflection will show that it would make private members more independent .
7 He envisaged this as a well-balanced wheel driven by a lead weight suspended from its axle so that it would make one revolution between sunrise and sunset .
8 Not that it would make much difference in this bloody place .
9 Not that it would make much difference if Lee got hold of them .
10 Another point is that it would make most bit image files far longer than necessary .
11 But I ca n't see in the long run that it would make any difference to what we 've been talking about , seeing who Maggie is .
12 Acer Inc , Taipei , Taiwan says it is considering the possibility of cooperation with Nintendo Co Ltd in the electronic games industry and plans to submit a proposal to the Japanese company soon ; Acer denied a report that it would make electronic games on behalf of Nintendo .
13 Patten also announced that he would make extensive use of enhanced capping powers in 1991 .
14 That he would make some attempt to coax her ?
15 And I would make that judgement and I would appoint it .
16 I would be most grateful if you would make some inquiries to find out what is preventing DGXI from responding courteously to our invitations ?
17 The highest type of firework last year if it was specified was the sparkler remarkably enough and we would make this point very seriously that parents tend to give children sm very small children sparklers and they must remember tha that these things are fireworks they are dangerous they do get red hot er they must supervise them at all times when they give them sparklers cos they may wave them around they may se set somebody else 's clothing on fire with them they may get the sparks in their eyes if they get too close to them er and one particular danger of course is that they they may get hold of en the hot end when the firework has finally extinguished and they think it 's all finished with .
18 After all , these guys are no part of my battle , most of them do n't know me , and they 've turned out in numbers only because Rufus said they had to defend their territory — but I decide this ai n't the time for that , and it would make more sense to invite these gift-horses in for coffee and what 's left of the whisky .
19 And that was one of the justifications of bringing it in , that it would raise a sense of er it would raise erm the actual percentage of people voting in elections and it would make local issues er more pertinent at local elections .
20 Well you were hungry a way down there but you would make good child .
21 But she would make some man happy some day .
22 Whatever he backed or took over — insecure but deserving commercial ventures , a struggling publishing firm , an inefficient factory which he refused to modernize because it would make some workers redundant-always miraculously turned the corner and became financially successful .
23 The question is , as you rightly say , in psychoanalysis , the analyst usually has a vast amount much more than people normally realize , I mean , I recall from my own analysis , and mean I was going between two and four times a week erm , for an hour each time and it was a good six months before she would make any interpretations , and I used to get very frustrated , you know , I used to say things like , well , what do you think of this , Miss , you know .
24 In June 1960 he went so far as to write to Ashby himself — by then Sir Eric and the Master of Clare College , Cambridge — setting out the case and asking whether he would make personal representations to the Minister to secure unilateral treatment for the Eastern District .
25 Has the Minister considered whether it would make more sense if young men and women from working-class families who leave school at 16 or 17 and are thrown into slave labour schemes where they earn a little over £20 a week , but who want to stay on at school , could stay on and be paid a sum equivalent to what they would get on training schemes ?
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