Example sentences of "would have [verb] a [noun sg] to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She kept trying to trample them , slam the door , but he kept kicking it back open and sooner or later she 'd have to put a name to her feelings , and she was afraid , so afraid , that the name was love … but it must n't be , she thought savagely ; it ca n't be .
2 ‘ I left because no one could take what he 's had to take ; surely he 'd have put a gun to his mouth by now ?
3 Somebody would 've put a match to it and set it on fire , we would have got money for going to deal with it .
4 In its original form , it would have involved a cost to the British taxpayer , to the Government and to employers of up to £500 million .
5 The public had a right to be properly informed , which could only be denied them if it appeared absolutely certain that the article would have presented a threat to judicial authority .
6 Melanie wondered if she would have to take a tray to the basement but it seemed they had their own gas ring down there and brewed up continually for themselves .
7 Indeed , if the Canterbury claims were as well founded as Anselm believed , anything less than a general authority over the whole British Isles would have done a violence to the early history of the see as it was understood at Canterbury , and to the large geographical and historical conceptions which lay behind these claims .
8 The existence , somewhere within the Empire or on its periphery , of a lineal descent from Jesus or his family would have represented a threat to the coalescing Church hierarchy — the propagators of specifically Pauline Christianity .
9 The cenotaph provides a fitting frontispiece to the chapel and here the memorial garden , cared for by members of the Keyingham Royal British Legion , now houses the remains of the ancient village cross , moved from its site a few yards away where it would have caused an obstruction to modern traffic flow .
10 Not , in truth , that she expected any , important or otherwise , but it would have made a difference to the day .
11 For one thing , there would be problems in establishing causation : showing that steps that a more energetic management might have taken would have made a difference to the company 's position would involve an assessment of complex and often imponderable factors .
12 But surely they too would have preferred a decision to an indefinite postponement .
13 But there are always one or two who would have preferred a colleague to a stranger even if they hated his guts .
14 The Home Secretary had previously informed the Cabinet that he would have included a provision to this effect in the Bill if he had not thought it preferable to leave it to the Lords to take the initiative .
15 If the bill became law , manufacturers using chemicals obtained from local species would have to pay a royalty to the state .
16 Any attempt to use the scriptures to vindicate the slave trade was thus bound to provoke energetic efforts by abolitionists to controvert the arguments ; failure to do so would have yielded an authority to the pro-slave trade position by sacrificing one of the main ways religious reformers had of grasping the essential spirit of the Christian moral order .
17 ‘ Had either Syria or the Palestinians been shown to be involved , ’ he said , ‘ it would have added a complication to the peace conference , perhaps provoking an Israeli walk-out . ’
18 Hans would have had an answer to the current predicament .
19 Occasionally the partners would have to make a contribution to the settlement , but never such as to seriously damage their personal wealth .
20 Tomorrow he would have to make a visit to Penrith to get himself fixed up with some more appropriate clothing for this unsympathetic and unreasonable patch of country .
21 Leftist critics have suggested that this is because any consideration of the socio-economic context of crime would have proved an embarrassment to the classical position .
22 ‘ I would have put a torch to their damned house yesterday , if I had had some tinder .
23 This was partly because its proposals would have put an end to the prospect of the very benefits that securitisation should bring ( because the Bank of England would have had difficulty in applying its own regulations for securitisation ) , and partly because the accounting treatment proposed seemed to us inconsistent .
  Next page