Example sentences of "[noun sg] would [adv] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Brown estimates that a loss on the server side would adversely impact NT 's position on the desktop . |
2 | ‘ He said it was inevitable , that bad blood would always surface in the next generation , and that the only way he could hope to save me was to chase the devil from my soul before he got a proper hold . ’ |
3 | Despite his difficulties Barry did not indicate that he had revised his decision to seek a fourth consecutive term as mayor in the November 1990 elections ( although conviction on a felony charge would automatically debar him ) . |
4 | Many jurisdictions have taken the view that to insist on such service would unfairly disadvantage potential plaintiffs , and have provided that where an enterprise based abroad does business within the jurisdiction service may be effected at some business address there , without the need to serve any document abroad . |
5 | For example , the experience of members of the Women 's Cooperative Guild , who in both their own estimation and that of observers were adjudged respectable married women , shows that family misfortune , particularly in the form of sickness and unemployment , could quickly plunge a family into poverty , whereupon the wife would probably resort to strategies similar to those of her poorer sister . |
6 | Capital , co-operative but capital nevertheless , employed labour ; and capital would whenever expedient exert the employer 's authority . |
7 | Control had told him often enough that the agency would never surface in his defence if anything went wrong . |
8 | This kind of elementary boo-boo would certainly impact video speed . |
9 | Smith once declared that The Cure would never court pop 's mainstream ; and that the mainstream would have to expand in order to embrace The Cure . |
10 | He went on to state that the Party would definitely affiliate to the Labour Party if accepted as a " revolutionary organisation " . |
11 | Failure to keep their friends in office would rapidly doom the Cunningham interest in these burghs to extinction , as councillors and trades voters started to reconsider their former loyalties and to listen to the argument of the Haldane partisans that the colonel had the ear of government . |