Example sentences of "would have [verb] [pron] for [art] " in BNC.

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1 I said well if you got us a dog I 'd have to take it for a late night walk would n't I ?
2 According to Constanze , he received the news with painful resignation , saying that the situation would have enabled him for the first time to have sufficient leisure to write what he wanted , and to justify his growing reputation ; but instead only death awaited him .
3 There were some among them would have killed me for the hell of it .
4 The river , so wide that she would have mistaken it for the sea , was full of craft of all sizes , though most of them lay at anchor .
5 It is not envisaged that we would have to use them for the offshore industry , but the provisions provide a safety net .
6 And she was hoping that they would have sent her for an interview down there .
7 She would have given anything for a bath , but that was impossible .
8 Right at this moment she would have given anything for a sight of Shirley and endured her fussing with pleasure .
9 She would have given anything for a glimpse of the moon that had been shining when she was here before , but it was not there , and as the knocking gathered strength she realised she would have to go down .
10 I would have done it for a young white guy if he was from my club and I realised that he did not have enough money to play the Tour . "
11 Part of the LEATGS grant might for example , be delegated for schools to administer , but they would have to spend it for the specified purpose of in-service training .
12 The playing of the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Peter Eötrös , who had given the work several times before this 1991 Prom performance , seems immensely confident and assured , all the complexities mastered ; and the recording quality is so good ( and the audience so quiet ) I would have taken it for a ‘ state-of-theart ’ studio job .
13 Sir James Barrie would have known him for a Lost Boy .
14 Maxim would have known it for a British government office no matter where in the world he met it : small neon-lit with a hodge-podge of cheap furniture and painted to look scruffy even when it was surgically dean .
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