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

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1 Do you know that there 's men running clubs up there who would murder somebody like you or me would have a cup of tea ?
2 I thought that I would have a go at getting a pilot 's course , which I did — and was soon sharply put in my place .
3 And erm She was determined that she would have a go her own , the following week .
4 Loretta was grateful for Bridget 's assumption that she would have a part in whatever action they decided upon ; she was a more reliable friend than Tracey , she thought to herself .
5 There is also the problem , if Miss Marshall is correct , that you would have a situation arising where , once a statutory tenancy had ceased to exist on an order for possession being made , it would be revived if the court were to exercise the powers which are contained in subsection ( 4 ) of section 100 , subsection ( 4 ) providing :
6 He cleared the summerhouse so she would have a studio , and gave her the only key .
7 But erm happily erm we managed to deal with the matters primarily because management agreed that we would have a meeting on a Monday and a meeting on a Thursday , both held in the afternoon , in the last hour of the working day .
8 Is she , where , is she actually proposing that these should be located ? in , in the countryside , in , in towns ? because they 're sens sensitivities o on that particular on the siting of that er particular activity and er we 're seen it elsewhere , er , those of us who have been on this committee for some time will know the concern that there are about the location of waste recycling facilities and er as I say I would hate that we would have a list of sites across the county which would just start paying us money and quite frankly should never be started .
9 The BBC would , at that stage , have had a generalist — the standard habit when I arrived in the field was that they would have a generalist producer , researcher , or somebody writing the script , cobbling together the best knowledge , whether the producer or researcher had worked on archaeology last time , flower-arranging next time , what have you after that …
10 The shadow cabinet therefore took its decision in the clear knowledge that it would have a fight on its hands , but it did so with the support of Lansdowne and Law .
11 Mnuchin declined to comment upon the size of the fund but told The Art Newspaper that it would be a substantial eight-figure sum ( more than $10 million ) raised from a small group of investors and that it would have a life of just four years .
12 Regent determined then , however , that it would have a property in London .
13 Ebullient , and with a broad grin , Williams early sensed his own powers — at sixteen he told a friend that he would have a fellowship of the University of Wales , an 1851 exhibition , a D.Sc. , and an FRS by his middle thirties .
14 Nails had hoped Biddy would have foregone her offer to meet him out of school the next day , or at least be late so that he would have a chance of escaping her clutches , but when he came out she was there outside the gate on her motor-bike , and there was no escaping .
15 The previous Secretary of State — the right hon. Member for Bath ( Mr. Patten ) , now chairman of the Conservative party — had promised two years ago that he would have a look at SSAs ; that promise , however , came to nothing , as has every other Government promise relating to local administration .
16 Semenov promised me that he would have a word at the highest level , with Yury Vladimirovich Andropov .
17 Thessy and I would have a chance to strengthen the rigging during our two-week trial period with the twins , but some jobs simply could not be done at sea .
18 All I needed was fuel , and I would have a fire .
19 Freedom , if only for a short time , and she would have a chance to speak to Rose , whom she had not seen since their evening out together up West .
20 We told her when they said her transplant was looking good and she would have a future after all .
21 She waited for Jean , his girlfriend , to go to the Ladies , and then pounced , flirting madly and manoeuvring him into bartering with her that he would buy two whole strips if she would have a dance with him .
22 ‘ Look here , Squire , ’ said Desmond , ‘ we were wondering if you would have a word with Potter . ’
23 as if you would have a polish day every Friday you could put it on Thursday night .
24 If we did that , we would do away with all these debates about local taxation , whether we should have the rating system or another system such as the poll tax or the council tax , and we would have a system which , at the end of the day , would give the local people the opportunity to determine priorities .
25 ‘ None of us could be sure if we would have a job tomorrow ; the uncertainty was preventing us winning new business ; and we had looked at the various companies who were rumoured to be bidding for us and did n't like what we saw . ’
26 And they would have a king again in sympathy with them .
27 Come that way er like , they do n't seemed to be giving it to 'em , and it was nothing to do with them , they bought it and , and they would have a search done as the reason when you buy houses are n't there ?
28 The Royal Institution had tried this and they would have a set of Saturday mornings where they had mathematicians talking to children of about thirteen or fourteen .
29 His luck — and he would have a lot of luck ( which he acknowledged generously and constantly ) — was to meet here the first of many teachers who set him on his way .
30 That was some going– but we would have a place for him in any Palace gallery even without it .
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