Example sentences of "[noun pl] would have [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | However , the parties would have access to a specialized competition policy tribunal ( a restructured MMC ) , if they were unhappy with the conclusions of the Office of Fair Trading , and further rights of appeal to the High Court on points of law , on the interpretation of evidence , and on the level of fines . |
2 | In Georgia the Supreme Soviet , reportedly bowing to pressure from opposition groups , on March 20 decided to postpone the elections to that body due on March 25 until October or November , in order that other political parties would have time enough to organize themselves to take part . |
3 | It was to cut his ties that he had begun , from the earliest days , to sign his work ‘ Vincent ’ , following the practice of his adored Rembrandt , and making the excuse then that foreigners would have difficulty pronouncing his surname . |
4 | dinosaurs would have temperatures reaching from 38.5 to 40.6°C. which would imply severe heat stress . |
5 | I remember when I was a child that occasionally my parents would have visitors to the house , people that I 'd never set |
6 | Temperatures would drop below freezing in many parts of the world and , even if the war occurred in summer , many areas would have snowfall for months . |
7 | But despite the problems of trying to ensure the food goes to the right people and does not cause any injury , Mr Major believes that using parachute air drops to the most dangerous areas would have value . |
8 | A rally of more than three strokes would have people fainting . |
9 | Judges would have difficulty in removing the prisoners by habeas corpus however , and a short bill would be needed . |
10 | The differences between reading experiences are often perceived as being fuzzy , and so a more realistic representation of a greater number of texts would have loci at points within and between the nine prototypical nodes . |
11 | Some suitors would have friends among this group . |
12 | What is interesting is that for the first time individual patrols would have radio communication via jeep-mounted No. 11 radio sets , but in the event of breakdowns they would also each take two pigeons . |
13 | Still , she thought ruefully , most heroes would have feet of clay if studied closely . |
14 | Sir John , delivering the annual lecture to the Graduate School of Environmental Studies , said people and ecosystems would have difficulty adapting to the rates of change , but scientists needed to learn more about the likely effects before countries would know how to respond . |
15 | Potential buyers would have access to the book which , it is suggested , would provide them with more meaningful information when they are ‘ shopping around ’ for a home . |
16 | The dogs would have chips coded with their owners ' names and addresses implanted below the fur . |
17 | Occasionally Harvard dealers would have colleagues shout out that only a limited line of stock was left . |
18 | This would be subject to strict regulation and only banks would have access to deposit insurance . |
19 | Parish council chairman Sarah Broke responded they were ‘ very pleased to hear it ’ and vowed the OPS would have Selborne 's backing in their fight . |
20 | Somali aid workers gave warning that , if imported food aid continued to flow in , local farmers would have difficulty selling their own produce . |
21 | For a rent of £6 per month farmers would have access to programmes on feed rations/chemical control of diseases/fertiliser rates , etc . |
22 | Businesses would have difficulty surviving without the use of this communication tool , and our private lives would be very different without it . |
23 | The APU collection of questions was searched for items which conformed individually and collectively to the following criteria : — nearly all the items would have success rates between 60 per cent and 95 per cent nationally ; — all the items would have low omission rates among the bottom 20 per cent band of attainers nationally ; that is , they would not deter this group of pupils , who would be willing to " have a go " at them ; — overall , the items should cover a reasonable variety of topics , including basic ideas such as fractions , decimals , graphs ; and , — as far as possible the items selected would have a high incidence of a distinctive error or errors which would give them some diagnostic value . |
24 | But then right-wing , upper-class fictional characters would have fun even if tentacled Martians were chasing them through sewage . |
25 | Sunnyvale , California-based modems specialist Telebit Corp has firmed up its January agreement to acquire Octocom Systems Inc for 5m new shares : Telebit currently has about 7.5m shares outstanding so Octocom holders would have 40% of the enlarged firm on completion in May . |
26 | Obviously , in the initial stages not all activists would have access to terminals , but most will . |
27 | Opponents would have difficulty keeping him quiet . |
28 | Perhaps it was this symbolic importance which led Home Secretary Kenneth Baker , when responding to the Woolf report in February 1991 , to announce that all prisoners would have access to toilet facilities by the end of 1994 ( more than a year earlier than Woolf asked for ) . |
29 | As an alternative to imprisonment , the courts would have discretion to sentence offenders , with their consent , to between forty and 240 hours of community service work . |
30 | The British sent troops to defend the Abadan refinery and made a secret deal with the Russians whereby at the end of the war the Russians would have control of Istanbul and the Dardanelles , and Iran would be divided between them , the Russians in the North , the British in the South , and the British influential in the " neutral " zone , where the oil was to be founded . |