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 Eliminating skilled labour would thus give more power to management .
5 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 ) .
6 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 .
7 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 ’ .
8 It would also enable sentencing practice to be monitored and subjected to regular review .
9 It would also bring deep depression to many members of communities who are looking forward to the bypasses that the present Government have promised .
10 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 .
11 According to Maughan 's plans , Comsat would also sell meteorological information to particular groups such as farmers .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 I would particularly recommend this book to the non-professional reader , including industrial managers , journalists , teachers and politicians .
15 I would strongly commend this idea to the cement industry .
16 This essay will seek to show Ministers would indeed have good reason to be terrified if ordinary people began preferring constitutional theory to government practice and acted on their preferences in their judgment of politicians .
17 At this stage , given the scale of the fighting , EC members were divided over whether the peace conference could go ahead , and Germany warned that it would unilaterally grant formal recognition to Croatia and Slovenia ( both of which had declared independence on June 25 ) if fighting persisted .
18 He would doubtless suffer this blow to his esteem in a First Folio or a 1532 Chaucer , given half a chance , but in lesser books the wound is too serious .
19 Similarly , Article 13 is expressly designed to allow service by post unless the law of the state of destination contains what the commentary describes as a ‘ positive prohibition ’ of such service , a requirement which is quite unrealistic in the context of the legal tradition of many countries which would actually take grave exception to such service .
20 ‘ I suppose it 's not surprising you do n't understand — you 'd never behave like that , would never have any need to
21 The mouth was a mouth no longer , but a muzzle , a pointed snarling maw with snapping teeth that would certainly rend human flesh to shreds , with a lolling red tongue that would snake out and lick the blood and the marrow …
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