Example sentences of "would [be] [vb pp] [prep] [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Both the girls were under age for drinking , but knew they 'd be served without any trouble . |
2 | Otherwise there 'd already be a truce , and we 'd be saved from this mess . ’ |
3 | When I push her off me and over she whispers that she thought I 'd be tired at this hour of night . |
4 | There 'd be so many other people around that she 'd be cushioned to some degree from the effect of his presence , she had reasoned . |
5 | I was especially conscious that any resistance there may be on the part of Mrs Clements , or the two girls , to the taking on of duties beyond their traditional boundaries would be compounded by any notion that their workloads had greatly increased . |
6 | It remains to be seen whether the changes were that dramatic , but the new dispensation was certainly to mean that sociological themes and realism generally would be handled with more care . |
7 | BSL would be enhanced by this recognition and use . |
8 | Soon the drawings of people with hunched shoulders , their heads bowed , would be filled with this drama . |
9 | Varieties and eventually species would be formed despite any tendency for interbreeding with the main body of the population in the centre . |
10 | Not much would be served at this stage by ousting Sir Derek Alun-Jones as chairman , as some shareholders would like . |
11 | Cleaning staff would be employed for that site only , and usually on a full time basis , working to extremely rigorous standards . |
12 | There would be a fierce struggle , resulting in the Reds being bundled out of the building , whereupon the same tactics would be employed in another part of the building . |
13 | He calculated that the Viet Minh would be destroyed in any attempt to capture his position . |
14 | The Spanish were sometimes justified in thinking that a pirate base was precisely what English companies had in mind ; in the 1630s the providence Island Company was set up by determined Protestants who thought that plundering Catholic ships would be rewarded in this world and the next , though other Englishmen , who settled informally on the east coast of central America , were concerned with felling trees and exporting logwood as a dye-stuff . |
15 | The list shows how easy it was at the time ( 1860 ) to raise money for a line intended to run from Craven Arms to Montgomery , and what a number of persons , sufficiently well-disposed to the district to advance such large sums would be deprived of all chance of recouping themselves by completing the line , if the policy of closing it was adopted . |
16 | ‘ There was an implied term in the contract of service that the employer would comply with ( the law ) from which it would follow that the servant would be indemnified for any damage caused by his negligence . ’ |
17 | They know that the greatest damage would be done to this economy by raising taxes , by imposing a minimum wage and by restoring artificial trade union powers . |
18 | By the middle of January 1937 , he had spoken to Mairet , and he gave the impression that anything he might write about the crisis in the New English Weekly would be done with some reluctance , not least because he was extremely busy . |
19 | Their grants would be reinstated from that date and they will obviously graduate at the end of the appropriate term . |
20 | would be covered for that sort of thing or |
21 | Claims for broken or damaged dentures would be covered under this section of the policy and also the Baggage and Personal Effects section of the policy . |
22 | If any surcharge or additional expense was incurred , then the amount of the surcharge/expense would be covered under this section of the policy . |
23 | Loss of or damage to gift or record vouchers would be covered under this section of all policies , provided this was due to an insured peril , details of which are shown in Section 2 of these instructions . |
24 | Thus both management and employees would be covered by some sort of bonus scheme , maybe related to different indicators of performance . |
25 | Only four authorities categorically stated that no course or programme would be attended by any member of staff during the year , although many respondents in this group mentioned very low numbers : |
26 | It is therefore highly unlikely that HIV would be transmitted in this way . |
27 | He also urged party members not to resign over the issue , pointing out that nothing would be gained from such action . |
28 | The concept obviously implied certain practical requirements : regulated markets , allocation of materials , production targets , manpower planning — all of which would be operated through some structure of planning machinery . |
29 | I can not understand why an organisation seeking to help hospitality women would be treated in this way . |
30 | I ca n't make up my mind whether he is the kind of guy that would be tempted by that sort of dead end job or not . |