Example sentences of "would have [to-vb] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It also transpired that the couple owned their own house and if they did move to Huntingdon , they would have to live in a council house .
2 Consequently round houses , extensive sidings , and various buildings essential to the railway 's purpose would have to spring up , and these in their turn would require labour , which would have to live in the vicinity .
3 To find its most lasting realization , Charlie 's vision would have to wait for a bank clerk who did understand metempsychosis , and who had not only a commercial education gained in an underground room at Lloyds Bank , but also a knowledge of Greek .
4 On February 27 she was told only a heart transplant would save her husband 's life and they would have to wait for a donor .
5 Sometimes he would have to wait for an hour or more before he could find someone to carry him to the Collector 's side .
6 Although nationalists could express themselves freely in cultural terms , their aspiration for a united Ireland would have to wait for the ballot box to decide .
7 There was still no reply ; it would have to wait until the morning .
8 British Aluminium own the land , and as soon as I realised I would have to trespass with a car , my imagination started its fevered travail .
9 Was it the ultimate in malice — to make sure that Toby , when he came to , in appalling pain , would have to contend with the idea that he would eventually die alone in the darkness ?
10 Realising this , Lydia decided that she would have to aspire to the other .
11 If so , the claim would have to be dealt with under our own policy , with Lloyds Underwriters only being involved where the amount of the claim exceeds the sum insured , whereby they would have to deal with the balance of the claim over the policy limits .
12 For greater detail , they would have to rely on a chain of fast horses aided by signals , and no one could expect miracles .
13 All knew that they would have to pass through what has been described as a maelstrom , and that they would have to rely on the seamanship of their coxswain to reach the relative safety of open water ; there would be no second chance in conditions which were described as the worst in living memory . ’
14 The criticism came from the former senior chief inspector , Mr. Eric Bolton , who pointed out that , under Labour 's proposals , the inspectorate , instead of advising the Secretary of State directly , would have to rely on the secondment of some senior inspectors .
15 Instead , they would have to rely on the insurance cover held by the nuclear industry , backed by a special government fund .
16 The lemon became real for you ; your imagination tricked your body into believing it would have to cope with a mouthful of pure citrus .
17 If Labour were to stand only in areas where it has a chance of doing well , it would have to withdraw from a swathe of constituencies in Tory heartlands .
18 Normally , for an exchange to be arbitrary or capricious , it would have to behave in a way which no reasonable person in its position would have done .
19 In 1811 they returned to Britain on leave and soon it became obvious that he would have to choose between the convict 's daughter and his military career .
20 If , for example , primary productivity in the region is limited by iron , and iron is becoming increasingly available , the iron stimulation would have to lead to a reduction in upper ocean nitrate and phosphate in the summer over the past 30 years .
21 He would have to move into a school where the powerful names were still Bethune-Baker ( though he was retired ) and Marsh and Raven and he would be , intellectually speaking , up against it in a way that he was not at Durham .
22 Did the trade union movement really fail to grasp that the two pre-conditions were : first , that its sense of responsibility must be seen not to be limited to a commitment in the shorter term to contribute to recovery from immediate crisis , but to extend , at the expense of short-run advantage , to the longer term commitment , to the revival of British industry and to its successful competition in world markets ; and secondly , that a Labour Government would have to preside over the management of the country 's affairs ?
23 Thus , whereas in a face-to-face meeting I can say I 'm Joe Bloggs , on the telephone I must say This is Joe Bloggs or Joe Bloggs is speaking with third person verb agreement ( but see Schegloff , 1979a ) ; in contrast in Tamil we would have to say on the telephone the equivalent of Joe Bloggs am speaking , with first person verb agreement .
24 erm I would have to say in the university 's defence , as you would imagine I would say
25 There was a hotel , where you could buy an alcoholic drink , but there was only one variety of beer , which you would have to drink from the bottle at five times the English price .
26 Those seeking authenticity would have to leaf through the book in a wind-blasted , refrigerated decompression chamber in full climbing gear , with a heavy rucksack and working a treadmill ; all in an atmosphere adjusted to one third normal sea-level density .
27 And it is to the trade union that they would have to account for the exercise of that authority .
28 But most realised the tactical disadvantages of doing this , and insisted that the manifesto would have to appeal to the nobility , the gentry , most of the clergy , and " all the high church party " .
29 Not too late , Chris Court said , as he would have to listen for the Division bell and might have to run for it .
30 Governments would have to submit to the council of finance ministers rules or guidelines on budgetary policy that would go into national law .
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