Example sentences of "would [vb infin] [adv] with [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I said I 'd stay here with the kids . |
2 | ‘ Perhaps she 'd do better with a cat or a dog . ’ |
3 | Perhaps you 'd carry on with the Leicester ladies , and Gladys Brown . ’ |
4 | She 'd been involved with fairs and circuses since the age of fourteen , when she 'd run off with a Wall of Death rider on his motorbike . |
5 | A Sunday newspaper had once revealed that he 'd wanted to marry a feminist and she 'd run off with a lesbian , which was why he had it in for both . |
6 | ‘ When I could n't find you I thought maybe you 'd run off with the professor . ’ |
7 | There were also photographs of his weak and charming father , who had read Pravda and the Daily Telegraph every morning , and his beautiful feckless mother , who 'd run off with an Italian and now lived in some palazzo in Rome , and of the huge house in which he 'd been brought up . |
8 | I 'd meet up with the others again on top and we 'd descend together . |
9 | Now , Mr. Donahue is not , repeat not , the kind of guy who 'd meet up with the Fender boffins over a coffee and casually say : ‘ Hey , give it a kinda , uh , cool neck and some real hot pickups and paint it killer pink , and that 'll be just great … ’ |
10 | If you lit a match in our kitchen , it 'd go up with a roar . ’ |
11 | And I think by the time she 'd finished it would be half price , she 'd walk out with the thing half price , and she 'd say , well you know , it 's just , they make up prices and you go to another shop and it would be the half price marked , and you go into another shop it would be , you know , |
12 | At least , I ought to have tried , but I did n't think we 'd end up with a blizzard like this . |
13 | If this guitar were mine , I 'd be tempted to experiment , probably starting with Seymour Duncan Alnico Pro IIs , and then maybe I 'd end up with a guitar that was a perfect cross between the JD and the Signature . |
14 | I was , what I was afraid of , we 'd end up with a house on , on , on a tilt |
15 | In the end , as I said , with that kind of selection cycle going , you 'd end up with the situation where all males had the , had that er had that trait of oedipal behaviour . |
16 | She said she 'd get on with the cooking better if I came down here on my own . |
17 | ‘ I 'll give you a hand until the rush dies down and then I thought I 'd get on with the account orders for tomorrow , ’ she said casually , but the girl gave her a strange look , and Folly had a nasty feeling that her voice was n't as fully under control as she had thought . |
18 | You did , you always said I 'd get off with a cat . |
19 | Trade you in for a couple of camels , he 'd come home with a couple of camels |
20 | One day he 'd wake up with a hole in his head , but that would n't change anything . |
21 | From seven in the morning he 'd sit there with the thing pressed to his ear ; to preserve the batteries and to avoid alarming the guards , we always set it at the lowest volume . |
22 | Lord Fraser expressed the government 's confidence in the system , and confirmed that the important task of considering compulsory measures of care would remain firmly with the children 's hearing . |
23 | And then they would spring down with a howl and rush to embrace her . |
24 | ‘ You know Daddy , ’ she would laugh defensively with the girls . |
25 | This would compare directly with the breakdown of a traditional bill of quantities . |
26 | This is why I would quarrel mildly with the book 's title The Art of Sketching . |
27 | Soon , they would catch up with the sun and obscure it . |
28 | And that would tie in with the markings and the holes … |
29 | This would tie in with the kind of creature that could take advantage of the first abundance of flowering plants and special insects emerging in the late Cretaceous . |
30 | ( That would tie in with the pregnancy in the summer — an earlier attempt to force Steen 's hand . ) |