Example sentences of "[conj] [pers pn] would have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 on the release of a writer 's first album , it is unlikely that he or she would have enough qualifying works to become a publisher member of PRS ( see the ‘ Copyright and Performing Right ’ article for details on these qualifying requirements ) .
2 That I would have enough money to get started in anything I really wanted to do ; that he thought I had enough guts to be a success if I put my mind to it .
3 What on earth made me imagine for even one second that I would have enough strength to confront Luke ?
4 Again we assume that she would have young children , children who would normally be expected to be living with her .
5 She could recall his hard masculine looks with such clarity of detail that she did n't think that she would have any problem in recreating the image on paper .
6 Larissa , 40 , became a teacher so that she would have more time with her children , but she spends most of her spare time in queues .
7 She remembered the doctor telling her , as gently as he could , that it was unlikely that she would have more children , and the shocked look on her husband 's face when he heard the news .
8 Matron told me that you would have both legs removed .
9 That you 'd have married Antoinette to possess them .
10 And i and of course when she worked When Mum used to work in Nottingham you could er be assured that you 'd have some bacon on a Saturday , and Sunday , because she used to call at T. N. 's in Street , and buy sixpenny worth of bits of bacon .
11 But her remarks in America would subsequently be picked up by the papers here — so she would have two platforms .
12 " So you would have good reason for calling in your loan . "
13 They did all that so that we would have better opportunities , and they expected us to grab them when they came along .
14 At the moment , the moratorium that the United States has announced on the development of its tactical air-to-surface missile programme means that we would have great difficulty getting a credible system from the United States if we wanted one .
15 There are molecules in space that we would have great difficulty making in the laboratory .
16 we would update so that we would have current figures in the brochure , yes
17 They were but it , well it was an event , a big event in , in the , among the younger people anyway in Brooks in Willenhall then and er it was really lovely , really lovely I forget if we had to pay to go in , but er we had er we saved up for a good few weeks before , so that we would have some money to spend at the Wakes it was one of the an event of the year then , but erm I used to like Willenhall Wakes and er I used to go dancing a lot well I was allowed to go dancing cos I 've always loved singing and dancing you see and er I was allowed but I had to be home before my father got home , but I was n't always .
18 so erm , we decided that we 'd have this fish and chips before we got going , cos it we did n't eat , you know , an awful lot yesterday
19 It was becoming increasingly clear to the Prussians that they would have great difficulty in making their eastern possessions a financial success : the only way to make the eastern marches profitable was to exploit the poor natural resources to the limit and develop industrial capacity .
20 And she had never had much time for Angela Cartwright , who , when it came to Grunte , tended to run with the hare , though it was plain enough that she had been put out by Grunte 's placing Hyacinth on his right hand and had agreed with Carole afterwards that they would have little trouble finding the necessary fifty signatures .
21 When we read in the Roslavl' files that twenty-three agitator brigades were dispatched to villages in order to celebrate international Women 's Day , it is hard to imagine that they ever came across our peasant woman from Struga , and even more difficult to believe that they would have much impact on her ways of thinking even if they did .
22 There is no economic reason why they should be divested unless it can be shown that they would have synergistic benefits from being combined with SBUs of a different type from those possessed by the group that currently owns them .
23 He told them that they would have three options .
24 Looking through the booklet the head had given them , I guessed that they would have some difficulty making sense of it .
25 four strategic plan making authorities in Lothian would be ineffective , inefficient and more expensive — and there is a danger that they would have different priorities and perspectives ; be parochial ; together , not meet the land needs of a growing region ; spread specialist staff thinly — perhaps there is post 1986 Met District evidence to support this ;
26 Her acceleration took her towards these beams , so they would have less distance to travel than normal .
27 If third-world countries could export more textiles , their need to sell their timber would be less desperate ; if Europe 's farmers were not protected , land values would be lower , so they would have less incentive to farm intensively .
28 However , I do believe that this exchange together with the evidence I heard illustrates the understandable concern of the dock company to ensure that it would have unrestricted access to the port for itself and its sublessees who would operate there .
29 Roman said he had already eaten but that he would have another cup of coffee .
30 If he discovered a new rule he would immediately seek a way of breaking it , and I had assumed that he would have some sympathy with those who flouted the laws against drugs , yet there was no denying the genuine anger in his voice when he talked of cocaine .
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