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

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1 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 : .
2 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 .
3 A moment 's reflection will show that it would make private members more independent .
4 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 .
5 Not that it would make much difference in this bloody place .
6 Not that it would make much difference if Lee got hold of them .
7 Another point is that it would make most bit image files far longer than necessary .
8 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 .
9 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 .
10 Cos if you did n't have that it 'd make this room more viable in as much as erm , the point of view of doing doing catering and , functions and all the rest of it .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 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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