Example sentences of "would [vb infin] [pron] [noun] for [art] " in BNC.

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1 If boss Lennie Lawrence decides Pears is unfit to play against Brighton tomorrow , Ironside , 28 , would make his debut for the club .
2 If boss Lennie Lawrence decides Pears is unfit to play against Brighton tomorrow , Ironside , 28 , would make his debut for the club .
3 CHELMSFORD Ladies Hockey Club are unlikely to disband the A team , whose existence many first team players feel would hinder their prospects for the 1993/94 season .
4 You would compensate your neighbour for the loss of his marginal benefit .
5 Having sifted through the views of countless organizations , through its technical appraisals , through computer assessments , it had concluded that there were just two places where it would pursue its investigations for an underground dump .
6 Occasionally the sun would appear from behind a roof-top , and she would feel its warmth for a few seconds .
7 I would give him companions for the years to come .
8 John-William Dallam would give her credit for no more sense than that .
9 It appeared Mary would give her eye-teeth for a cup of tea with two sugars .
10 She had been asked for twelve and it was now half past eleven , which would give her time for a pleasant comfortable drive to Carpendens Court .
11 PAMELA : [ aside ] I would give my life for a farthing .
12 Today , I would give my life for the state of Israel .
13 NEWSAGENTS have rejected a move which would see them campaign for the restoration of capital punishment .
14 Mr Ricks said Koresh had now told negotiators that astrological events were taking place that would meet his need for a sign from God .
15 He once claimed to me that he was able to open a beer bottle with his eye and that it would cost me $29 for the privilege of seeing the trick .
16 They would take their chance for the sale price of $380 million .
17 And yet , look at all the old buggers that would sell their souls for a little bit of humanity like this one .
18 Most boys would sell their souls for the chance . ’
19 Publishers would sell their grannies for a bite at Nelson Mandela 's autobiography , but does it exist ?
20 I would appreciate your prayers for the following :
21 Instead of putting their money into business , people lent it to the government in the hope that ERNIE ( the nickname of the Electronic Random Number Indicator ) would select their number for the top prize ( then ) of a modest £1,000 .
22 She sat dully in the cab while the driver talked non-stop about foreign tourists who would dominate his trade for a few more months to come .
23 Funerals are very special occasions in the Dales , when people who may not be on the friendliest of terms would forget their differences for a while and come and pay their respects .
24 Furthermore , the research process was to be used to train locals in obtaining the information they needed , and thereby develop a network of individuals and groups who would express their concern for the land issues of the region by an ongoing commitment to further action at local and National level using the results obtained from the study .
25 Earlier , a Soviet official accompanying Mr Gorbachev said the Kremlin leader would express his support for an all-European conference next year to examine the burning issue of German reunification .
26 Which would leave us room for the
27 The government would end its support for the programme , amounting to some £13 million annually , in March 1993 because a " fast-breeder reactor was unlikely to become commercially viable until 2030 at the very earliest " , he told the House of Commons .
28 Er and if if they would work they did n't want money for it but they would stay a while with you so that they would get their bed for the night and they would get their grub .
29 But it may be observed that the general movement of culture offers little support to anyone who would pin his hopes for the future of man as a spiritual being on this kind of natural religion .
30 Within its walls you can see the whole spectrum of human behaviour : the splendour of the rich moving through the streets on damask-caparisoned palfreys and the bare-arsed poor who would slit your throat for a crust of bread . ]
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