Example sentences of "would have have [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I mean I , it 's no good me husbands to look af , I I this is my second husband but er with my first husband er I I sort of erm if it 's been left to him , God bless him , he 's dead now but if it 'd been left to him I 'd have had a houseful of children you know .
2 If I 'd had my nailfile with me I 'd have had a go at it .
3 Thirty five , but that includes the meal as well , they 'd have had a meal in the restaurant there wo n't you ?
4 It looked as though she 'd have to have a word with Mrs Thrigg .
5 I 'd have to have a laugh about it … could n't resist a comment .
6 Oh well he said he he said he 'd have to have a look at it did n't he ?
7 ‘ You 'd have to have a soul of ice ! ’
8 but it 's not that , you 'd have to have a lot of the fireplace ripped up .
9 You 'd have to have cons you have to , as well as having the dipping controls , you 'd have to have the controls over marketing as well .
10 Oh if I was me and I was on my own I 'd ha I 'd have to have the telly in the bedroom .
11 ‘ Unless , ’ he says , ‘ you had a double in Edinburgh or a lot of people are lying , it means you 'd have to have an accomplice in London ; somebody you 'd hired to … ah , make the collection . ’
12 But 300 years ago , a boy a quarter of his age , would have had no difficulty with double the number of oxen .
13 Levi , the expert on metals , would have had no difficulty in telling the difference between gold and tin .
14 For Mrs Thatcher , the timing of President de Klerk 's announcement in the week before the Commonwealth conference is helpful , though she would have had no difficulty in resisting pressure there for further sanctions .
15 By the middle of the twelfth century , John 's French readers would have had no difficulty in making the necessary identifications : castellans and viscounts , baillis and prévôts , household officers , the clerks , knights , and chamberlains of princely courts abounded .
16 Charlie Williams took his number 14 bus to Shaftesbury Avenue , looked at Ken 's name in lights and had he heard anyone say anything against ‘ the boy ’ would have had no difficulty in punching him one .
17 Equally , Mrs Smith argued , the common law would have had no difficulty in affording a right of action to parents in a case such as the present one .
18 Their medieval neighbours who considered their conduct unneighbourly , unjust and unfair , would have had no hesitation in attempting to tighten their looseness in the interests of the common good .
19 ‘ If I had known the mouthpiece was sterile , I would have had no hesitation in agreeing to the test .
20 Siward , the man who , had he , Thorfinn , been standing under that cross and issuing that challenge instead of a priest , would have had no hesitation in ordering his best marksman to smite him dead with his bow or his javelin .
21 He would have had no hesitation in sending the Bishop back to Saxony by celestial transport , save that at that moment the Normans emerged again from the wood .
22 The Hammonds would have had no defence to an action for the price .
23 It should be noted that the accused would have had no defence to a charge of obtaining property by deception by switching the price labels .
24 The visitor whose footsteps he had heard circling the house that last dawn they had ever spent there , if indeed he had heard them and not , in his state of panic , imagined them — that man or woman would have had no evidence for thinking anyone lived there but for the presence of Goblander on the drive .
25 It is currently in the final stages of negotiations for a very important order from Malaysia which , had it not been the competitive and effective yard that it now is , it would have had no chance of getting .
26 Little Nell , perceived in a commonplace context , would have had no purchase on his imagination .
27 ‘ That was because I assumed that the business would go to Francis and then I would have had no say in it . ’
28 Faith would have had no patience with it .
29 She was informed , as was everyone else in the council statement , that Mr Clayton would have had no access to the sort of information quoted in the paper .
30 Probably they would have had no application to W. , but even where they are applicable it may be in the long-term interests of the minor that if the same treatment can be secured upon some other basis , this shall be done .
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