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

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1 I would have two great surfers with me .
2 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 .
3 Although Mrs Thatcher 's opposition will prevent the declaration having any legal force , the Commission President , Mr Jacques Delors , made it clear he would be coming forward with detailed proposals on a range of minimum social rights for workers in the 1992 single market over the next 12 months — some of which would have binding legal force throughout the Community .
4 The British government argued , first , that such a change would have the effect of forcing them to adopt a type of system for documenting civil status which would have considerable administrative consequences and would impose new duties on the population .
5 More important in suggesting realism is Taylor 's neat suburban home and cheap car , which would have surprised British workers and American workers living in coalfields and Eastern industrial areas but which nicely reflect conditions in prospering auto towns .
6 ‘ 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 .
7 Now , with luck , she would have one toddler-free hour , she thought as she stripped off her jeans and changed into her working gear .
8 ‘ I would have thought you would have drunk Irish whisky , ’ she said , curious .
9 Well I mean you ca n't have rules without a police force , can you , and since there 's no poets ' union from which you could be expelled , clearly whether there are any rules depends entirely on the poets themselves and their readers , and everybody knows that until about the end of the nineteenth century almost all poetry was written in regular metre and regular patterns and , except for blank verse , in regular rhyme , and that this is no longer so and now you would either be deliberately old fashioned or you would have some special purpose , I think , if you wrote your poems in traditional rhyming schemes .
10 They would have certain recognised lands , with judicial autonomy in minor internal disputes .
11 They could find it easier to come to an agreement to support each other during a lock-out for example , because they would have sufficient financial resources to enable them to survive periods of inactivity .
12 The urgency with which Mr Major acted left MPs in no doubt he would have some harsh words for Mr Delors .
13 However , if we had a matrix of order 100 , it would have 9900 off-diagonal elements , and we can only say that at each stage the sum of the squares of these elements would decrease by 1/4950 at least ; convergence to diagonal form is likely to take very much longer than for a small matrix .
14 If there were a single currency without convergence , it would have several serious effects on the smaller countries .
15 Whether a Single Currency would be good or bad for Britain is not primarily an economic question , though it would have profound economic effects .
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