Example sentences of "of [pron] [pron] would [vb infin] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Pressed by Clem and Mrs Vaughan to stay the night , Leonora declined with grateful thanks , hoping her longing to escape was n't visible to Penry 's family , all of whom she would have liked to know better under other circumstances .
2 Only if Baker drops to 19th today will Feherty go past him , but David says : ‘ Even if Peter is still ahead of me I would like to think that winning would give me a good chance of a wild card . ’
3 Only if Baker drops to 19th today will Feherty go past him , but David says : ‘ Even if Peter is still ahead of me I would like to think that winning would give me a good chance of a wild card . ’
4 Altogether it lasted a month and but for the neighbours rallying around and taking care of me I would have ended up in hospital .
5 Time after time , ministers who thought they knew their churches inside-out discover new factors relating to their growth or lack of it , of which they would have remained blissfully unaware if they had not taken the trouble to investigate .
6 This was our ‘ Marche Képi Blanc ’ , on completion of which we would have passed the tests to become legionnaires .
7 With many populations we are already aware that the units fall into sub-groups of which we would wish to take account in any sampling .
8 But the second perspective is that the rent review clause is the landlord 's price for the grant of a long term , in the absence of which he would have granted a shorter term .
9 I have the feeling that those of you who would want to use the mailing label feature more than any other might find the built-in database a little feeble , but then the chances are that your main database will provide all the information you require for that kind of thing .
10 And do n't forget any of you who would like to go to Goldthorpe I 'm taking the names
11 We would love to hear from any of you who would like to write .
12 ‘ So you ca n't think of anybody who would have killed the Admiral or Mr Trueman ? ’
13 She 's just that if she did n't take that potion of mine she would have killed herself anyway .
14 She did n't say what it was or who published it or anything , but it made me you know think you know , so I wrote to her care of Writers something and erm asked her what 's the name of it I would like to read it because I had also written something about the er American Indians and erm er who 's the publisher or what 's it called , I 'd like to read it .
15 Nor could he think of anyone who would want to kill him .
16 ‘ We 're at a very early stage in all this , Minister , but can you think of anyone who would have wanted to harm Miss Morgan ? ’
17 What one wants is a major library award of whatever it would cost to put a qualified librarian in .
18 The reasons for this deficit are largely associated with the , the trend of pay and price increases outstripping our income , and outstripping our projections of what we would have to spend .
19 As a matter of practice , and because we 've all got to live , we all draw about two-thirds of what we would have got last year as we go along , then share out the rest at the end of the year . ’
20 The by-laws were lawful not because of what they said but rather because of what they would have said if they had been drafted lawfully .
21 Because of what they would have done to us . ’
22 With such facts in mind , the preference utilitarian may suggest that our aim should be not just that people should somehow have as much subjective experience as possible of the kinds they most prefer , but that as much as possible of what they would like to have happen should happen .
23 The preserved GMP can sometimes fall short of what you would have had from SERPS , and in these cases the state makes up the difference .
24 This is where Alan Davies came in , and if the latest coach 's previous career with England B , the Midlands and Nottingham had proved anything it was that pragmatism — what you have to do — comes before even the noblest notion of what you would like to do .
25 Yet , in this context , Professor Heinz Woolf of Brunel University has frequently discussed the use of what he would prefer to call ‘ tools for living ’ rather than ‘ aids for the handicapped ’ , on the basis that customers should be able to purchase these items without having a disabled label attached to themselves .
26 Not that Denholm would have claimed to be anything of what he would have said to be the ridiculous kind .
27 A knowledge of the working of a solicitor 's office , particularly er o of those departments handling non-contentious business , can not be automatically imputed to the judge or to council and he may as well make it is not uncommon for an expert witness to give evidence of what he would have done in a particular situation after consideration and er I resign on that because in my submission er the issues in this case are clearly issues of mixed fact and law and my Lord it is seen from the report handed up that there is particularly in relation to the erm financial aspect of the case , reference to a provision within a professional conduct of solicitors guide as to what the nature of the er duties of the solicitor in the situation is .
28 In fact , this would pay to rebuild only the most modest house , and the table below gives examples of what it would cost to rebuild different types of houses in different parts of the country .
29 This outlay represents around a fifth of what it would cost to dispose of the waste locally .
30 ‘ The ramifications of what it would mean has not yet been understood , either by Scotland or elsewhere in the UK . ’
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