Example sentences of "would [be] [adv prt] in the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | If it was n't , I 'd be up in the loft poring over old NME s . ’ |
2 | He told them we knew all about it , and said we 'd be over in the morning . |
3 | And we 'd be out in the middle of that ! |
4 | Oh shame as you 've just got your tennis racket , I thought you 'd be out in the garden around . |
5 | I 'd be out in the fields , up to my shins in stinking red granules , and I 'd stand there looking up , easing my aching back , and watching the Gnats fly . |
6 | At best she 'd be back in the poorhouse while he … it did n't bear thinking of . |
7 | Sometimes when they were in a needy mood , which was most of the time , David would be out in the lobby at Advision Studios where we were recording , and they would be cuddling and cooing and wooing — it was disgusting . |
8 | The Captain intended to make his attack at one-thirty when the fewest possible people would be out in the open . |
9 | Up to a dozen viewers had heard my throwaway remarks and had assumed that the party at Frenchay really would be out in the street . |
10 | They repeated that he did n't need anything else because he would be back in the afternoon , which more than anything else they could have said made me wonder if we would ever see him again . |
11 | ‘ The lads were joking that I would be back in the team before they got their hands on the trophy , ’ said McGuinness . |
12 | He begged her not to miss the party they were invited to on his account , so she made him a hot drink , turned on the TV and , making no bones about it , said she would be back in the morning . |