Example sentences of "he would [verb] [verb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | He said he 'd prefer to visit the church alone anyway and that he 'd catch a bus back to Oxford when he was good and ready . |
2 | On Saturday evenings , he 'd fold open the newspaper at the fixture list and sing the refrain ‘ £75,000 ’ to the signature tune of Sports Report ( £75,000 was then the top prize dividend paid out by Littlewood 's or Vernon 's football pool ) . |
3 | Mr you see various people are giving evidence , and Mr wants to ask the right person , certain questions , namely the person who er devised those words and er you are er somebody in a very important position er and er he 's trying to get it from you , and as he 's pointed out to you a company ca n't sit down and produce in some corporate way a phrase someone or two human beings or more have got to do it and he wants to know if you can help us er who , who that was , that 's , that 's all you see , he does n't want to ask you about it , no doubt er , er in the same way as he 'd want to ask a person that actually devised a word , d' ya see ? |
4 | He 's devoted his life to the cause and if Patrick came back there 's no question as to who he 'd want to control the show , because it was he that called Peter ‘ The Sacred Keeper of My Sacred Conscience ’ . |
5 | Well naturally he 'd want to keep a boy , and your ma 's husband would n't have been too keen to have him around . ’ |
6 | ‘ Ken was such a brilliant bloke that if he had an idea of how to deliver a line , he 'd try to find a way to block it . |
7 | In his Sunday dress of jeans and a fresh white shirt , he looked as if he 'd get mugged the moment he set foot in a town with more cars than horses . |
8 | ‘ Not that he 'd have lent the carriage — or freed me — unless it was entirely convenient to him . |
9 | He 'd have gone a bit |
10 | He 'd have to leave the window slightly open and hope to be disturbed if anything happened . |
11 | He 'd have destroyed the tape for sure . ’ |
12 | He 'd have to judge the force of the blow very carefully and you 'd expect it to leave more than a slight bump . ’ |
13 | But then he 'd have to take the desk with him if he was n't to be completely disorientated , and he 'd never be up to manhandling such a heavy piece of furniture . |
14 | He 'd have to take the matter into his own hands . |
15 | He 'd have to take the flak for having a lift with Mrs Wright . |
16 | This last recipient had obviously not used London Transport to get to the Palace or he 'd have missed the ceremony ‘ due to mechanical failure on the Circle Line ’ . |
17 | And he 'd have written a thing I 'm just using William George as an example of course . |
18 | He 'd have done a par about the lead in his pencil if you 'd asked him — a stick and a half — a column — whatever you needed ; and all of it full of wit and erudition . ’ |
19 | But I think if er if he 'd have had a firm 's input , that wanted something designing , he 'd he 'd have done a lot better . |
20 | ‘ Did n't you warn Jones that he 'd have to wait a while ? ’ |
21 | But now you 'll never know whether he 'd have made a move or not , will you ? |
22 | But he 'd have called the police anyway and they might really have caught us at it . |
23 | If there was trouble he 'd have to spend the rest of the day putting it down and would n't be able to get on with the arms search at all . |
24 | He 'd have to risk the pipes making that queer noise they sometimes did when you turned on the tap . |
25 | He could n't ever have met him or else he 'd have recognised the calibre of the victim he had selected . |
26 | Any nonsense from Gesner and he 'd have to fight the orchestra . |
27 | ‘ 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 ? |
28 | I would have told him if I 'd thought there was a cat 's chance in hell he 'd have provided a guard for you — a constable on your doorstep . ’ |
29 | But no ; if he did that , he 'd have to face the laughter and ridicule of the community . |
30 | He 'd have ordered the division he had with him to advance and enter Spain via Hendaye or Vitoria , just like Napoleon did . |