Example sentences of "would [vb infin] [prep] [art] [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Kitazin does increase the mammalian toxicity of malathion approximately eightfold , but even at this level malathion would remain amongst the less hazardous insecticides .
2 If the English paintings in the National Gallery could be included ( and I imagine that is not possible ) , it would make for a truly remarkable museum a real tribute to the ‘ Englishness of English art ’ .
3 The second , uncompleted part of Bouvard et Pécuchet was to consist mainly of ‘ La Copie ’ , an enormous dossier of oddities , idiocies and self-condemning quotations , which the two clerks were solemnly to copy out for their own edification , and which Flaubert would reproduce with a more sardonic intent .
4 Ten years ago I remember I used to think that it was our mental hospitals which later generations would regard as the most staggering and incomprehensible blind spot of our time , on which they would look back as we do upon the generations which burnt witches or tried by ordeal .
5 This would build on the very positive package of measures contained in the 1991 Planning an Compensation Act designed to bring Interim Development Order permissions up to modern environmental standards .
6 This is surely a general result , that if the management left to itself would act in a socially optimal way along the lines represented in ( 4.1 ) , it is fatuous , indeed counterproductive , to constrain it .
7 But Richard Ingham , managing director of Beacham Peplow Noakes Advertising says he would opt for a more down-to-earth approach .
8 This would count as a very serious mistake in spoken language interpreting .
9 The ‘ Selection Panel ’ for proposed researchers would consist of the currently existing Research Management Group , which is chaired by the Deputy Director , Dr. D.G. Mann , and which consists of the heads of all of our major current scientific research programmes .
10 A pea would do for a rather green skull for the skeleton .
11 Instead of focusing on this interdependence , as one would expect of a truly dynamic theory , Williamson discusses the efficient resolution of contractual problems that are associated with given techniques of production .
12 Computer Easy Draw is a competitively priced drawing package for use with Windows 3.0 and 3.1 , and has many of the features you would expect from a more expensive program , plus easy to use animation software .
13 A noticeable reduction in fluid uptake or an apparent fluid secretion was seen on days 6–9 , although the recorded secretion was not as large as one would expect from the rather pronounced inflammatory response in the jejunal segment that was investigated .
14 The mitochondria of insect muscle vary greatly in size , shape and distribution , being most extensively developed in the flight-muscles , as one would expect from the extremely high metabolic rate of these actively contracting structures .
15 Transfer from local authorities to voluntary organisations would result in a less equitable distribution of resources , and it is difficult to see how the shortcomings of the voluntary sector could be sufficiently modified to make voluntary organisations an acceptable alternative to local authorities as providers of community care services .
16 The Commission finally agreed on Dec. 21 , 1989 , after some years of often bitter disagreement , on a formula for determining whether cross-border corporate mergers within the EC should be subject to vetting by the Commissioner for competition policy so as to determine whether they would result in an unduly large market share for the newly merged companies ( for earlier drafts see p. 36310 ) .
17 Ideal , say , for a university library building up stock — particularly if secondhand wants lists were being compiled — though someone revising the history stock at a small public library service point would look for a more selective tool .
18 A year or so later I chanced to meet him and he acknowledged that this was just criticism , but that he had been obliged to insert these names so that his book would look like a truly up-to-date , intouch work of scholarship .
19 I would see through a more coactive involvement in Europe , and establishing not just the physical link of the chunnel but expanding it right up to the northwest , a line that goes right the way through , that there is a material benefit to this area , from that connection .
20 A British attack on the Messines Ridge would meet with the most resolute and entrenched defence .
21 He may have hoped that the Christian democratic MRP would rally to a clearly articulated Gaullist constitution .
22 I would hope for a little bipartisan support for the sort of work done , for example , by our drugs liaison officers abroad , who have brought about such successful seizures of heroin and other drugs in recent months .
23 There was also a debate about what would happen to the most dangerous substances in the Windscale cocktail , particularly plutonium .
24 What happens next is not completely clear , but it seems likely that the central regions of the star would collapse to a very dense state , such as a neutron star or black hole .
25 More distant relationships would correspond to a more distant common ancestry .
26 With the Punks , of course , this jumble-sale of fashion would arrive at a self-consciously surreal conclusion in that the scraps were now held together , literally and very visibly , with safety-pins .
27 Although this argument is not developed into specific proposals for the curriculum , if it were it would lead to a very different form from that of the DES .
28 Such an approach would lead to a more efficient worker and hence to a more profitable organisation .
29 Council does not believe that the Government 's proposals would lead to a more effective , efficient or accountable system of local government .
30 For example , Carson ( 1971 , p. 167 ) argued that an approach more firmly based in mechanics would lead to a more integrated understanding of geomorphological processes so that the student would be more impressed by unity rather than alarmed by superficial diversity .
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