Example sentences of "would [adv] [verb] [adj] [noun sg] to " in BNC.
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1 | As one informant put it , most are not ‘ hardened criminals ’ but uneducated rural dwellers who would rarely show open disrespect to people of higher caste or to those they perceive as ‘ sahibs ’ . |
2 | Manglapus said on Sept. 22 that US forces would only have commercial access to the bases after September 1991 . |
3 | He added that the alternative system suggested , through planning applications , would only need minor adjustment to planning requirements . |
4 | These recommendations would not preclude sensible attention to aspects of environmental safety particularly important to visually handicapped pupils , but rather they emphasise that the pupil should have the challenge of encountering ‘ a series of situations of just manageable difficulty ’ . |
5 | I would not expect this work to be on a contingency basis and would expect the fees to fall in the range of £ [ ] — £ [ ] per hour . |
6 | The representation is , of course , implicit and we would not expect any child to be able to state explicitly the phrase structure rules and transformations generating the sentences of his language . |
7 | The psychiatrist 's theory was that I simply had to come to realise that becoming a ‘ complete man ’ ( which presumably included being heterosexual ) would not involve any risk to life or , more importantly , limb , that I was a ‘ complete man ’ . |
8 | Ferdinando was still vowing to the Brownings , angry themselves , that he would not send another scudo to England and calling heaven to witness he had been cheated and betrayed , but she lay there impervious . |
9 | ‘ The FA have indicated that they would not have any objection to there being no relegation this season . |
10 | I was determined that I would not communicate this nervousness to my sons , and so I did my best not to react should we come across a dog in the street . |
11 | If the city can not provide mo , physically more than three thousand three hundred it would not be wise to include a figure of four thousand , five thousand , six thousand , dwellings within the city , that would be misleading and would not provide clear guidance to any local authority in the preparation of their local plan . |
12 | Eliminating skilled labour would thus give more power to management . |
13 | It singles out one form of non-marital living arrangement and penalises it ( if the woman sets up house with her sister , her father , her adult children or her lesbian lover she would still have some entitlement to SB ) . |
14 | The mines would be confined to a narrow line of dunes which separate Lake St Lucia from the sea , but would still cause irreparable damage to the wetland as a whole , ecologists believe . |
15 | In recent years , despondently , they have concluded ‘ that questions about what the sampo was can never be satisfactorily answered and that even if they could , an answer would probably make little contribution to the understanding of the poems ’ . |
16 | It would also enable sentencing practice to be monitored and subjected to regular review . |
17 | It would also bring deep depression to many members of communities who are looking forward to the bypasses that the present Government have promised . |
18 | Offering small quantities would also give greater variety to people 's diets , a variety which they may be unable to obtain if they can only buy in quantity . |
19 | According to Maughan 's plans , Comsat would also sell meteorological information to particular groups such as farmers . |
20 | Such a report would also include some reference to priorities for the future including those for the staff training and recruitment necessary to realise the School Development Plan . |
21 | But the cynical depravity of this outrage — placing a bomb that would inevitably cause massive damage to a national health service hospital and was intended to kill medical staff when it exploded and which , only by great good fortune , did not cause many more deaths and injuries — must surely mark one of the lowest points in the IRA 's inglorious history . |
22 | We would n't pay any attention to them if they started acting like stars , ’ laughs Leo . |
23 | That 's a neuralgia pain you 've got , that 's Brufen would n't make much difference to that Agnes . |
24 | ‘ It would n't make any sense to you . |
25 | One more person would n't make any difference to the arrangements , for Rob had thought it wise to cater for up to eight extra guests — ‘ Just in case I 'm more popular than I think I am , ’ he 'd laughed . |
26 | I kept hugging myself as I imagined over and over telling Marcus what I knew and reassuring him that it would n't make any difference to us . |
27 | said it would n't make any difference to her you know whether |
28 | If whoever bought it had an unsavoury reputation it would n't do much harm to the seagulls or Brent geese . |
29 | also the people on the ground I mean er surely it would n't do any harm to actually sit down and put some veiws forward from the whole department |
30 | Er but in the way that we assessed er all of these options and which again is fairly normal for you know , major relief road bypasses , er it was indicating er that it would n't provide any relief to the A sixty one . |