Example sentences of "[pron] would [verb] [adj] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The timing is far from generous , especially when one considers the full-price tag , yet I would urge all prospective customers to at least audition this set before making your final choice .
2 I would think all political parties realise the value of greenness , er have you been canvassed yet , have you had to try out any of these questions ?
3 And a very good way of doing that is obviously to find suitable outlets , and I would suggest that suitable outlets very often consist of local radio , which there is a thirst , on the whole , for good , appropriate items .
4 ‘ Of course I would pay two hundred pounds — two thousand pounds every penny I have — to stop you shooting me .
5 I would identify two main types of reduction in these examples .
6 I would need another 40 yards off the tee to give myself any sort of chance .
7 I would imagine that rear passengers would be quite happy for several hours at a time in such an environment .
8 Here I would see many interesting birds , but the most attractive to me was the dipper .
9 Indeed , I would project that Asian youths in the early 1980s are poised to outstrip both whites and blacks educationally .
10 Notwithstanding the low number of calls resulting from the campaign I would agree that individual taxpayers appreciated the information point which they could contact to deal with enquiries .
11 I would agree that social scientists have probably helped to sustain the myth but not that we have created it : the power of social science is not that significant .
12 I had hoped that on my twenty-first birthday I would discover more about my future , but Mr Jaggers explained that he could not give me any more information , except that from now on I would have five hundred pounds a year to spend as I liked .
13 I would have two great surfers with me .
14 I would have all such adjectives left with their coats in the foyer , only to be redeemed when their notices are written . ’
15 How however , I mean from a a broader point of view I think I would have some general reservations as have been confessed previously by Mr Earle and and Mr Jewitt .
16 At a number of points , Ian Paisley and others had tried very hard to create a new party which would embrace all traditional unionists .
17 It goes without saying that more WISE vehicles are needed to develop a programme which would enable many more schools to receive visits on a more regular basis .
18 The preliminary draft of the Convention contained a provision which would enable two Contracting States to permit ‘ direct communication between their respective authorities ’ .
19 development of a new community nursing discipline , which would encompass all community-based practitioners ;
20 The trade offices , which would perform limited consular functions , represented the first permanent missions to be exchanged between the two countries .
21 Relations with China improved at a less dramatic pace , but in October 1990 , after a South Korean team had participated in the Asian Games in Beijing , the two countries signed an unprecedented trade agreement , under which trade offices would be established in each country which would perform limited consular functions and would provide the basis for the eventual normalization of diplomatic relations [ see p. 37779 ] .
22 For those who do not take their cricket quite so seriously there is a head office indoor team which would welcome any new players , male or female , spin bowler or underarm .
23 That 's a premium slot which would cost twelve hundred pounds .
24 Councillors say they ca n't afford the repairs which would cost three million pounds a year .
25 However , neither UA1 nor UA2 has spotted a potential Zo so far , although this particle should be easier to identify than the W. It is predicted to decay into an electron-position pair , which would leave two clear tracks in the apparatus .
26 Labour 's plans would make British companies wide open to easy takeovers because they have proposals for company law , to renationalise companies , which would leave many other companies vulnerable .
27 There seem to be a lot of triumphal arches , which would suggest regular ceremonial occasions , possibly victory parades . ’
28 The emergence of semi-literacy in England of all places , in ways which would make other civilised nations shrink in disgrace , is central to the catastrophe , and will be described alongside the accounts of the libraries and books themselves .
29 Even The Times gave the kind of distorted account of our treatment of grammar which would please retired head teachers of an old-fashioned cast of mind .
30 He says the same thing about a range of measures , including the measures advocated by the Labour party , which would put many part-time women employees out of work .
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