Example sentences of "[Wh det] would [verb] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | For example , in 1988 the Secretary of State for Wales , Peter Walker , announced a £500 million revitalization programme for the valleys of South Wales , which would involve land reclamation , business advice and support , factory construction , housing rehabilitation and infrastructural investment , and which would be implemented by local authorities , the private sector , central government and the Welsh Development Agency . |
2 | Another novelty proposed by Alvey is the idea of demonstrator projects which would involve industry and academe in pooling their knowledge . |
3 | Some geographical targets might be covered , locating historical sites on a map using a grid , and planning marches for the Roman army on a topographical map , which would involve understanding of landforms and contour lines . |
4 | Johnson ( 1971 , p. 283 ) points out that , historically , the emphasis ‘ in Britain has been almost exclusively on procedures which would enable Parliament to exercise a post facto check on the manner in which monies had been spent for the purposes approved by ( but not proposed by ) Parliament ’ . |
5 | ‘ More training equipment which would enable branch managers to undertake more training in the workplace using pre-structured packages ’ . |
6 | Pensioner members at their recent Biennial General Meeting came up with a novel suggestion which would enable Pensioner members contribute to the Frank Holden Defence Fund ( see March ‘ Newsheet ’ for details of case ) in a manner that would add substantially to the Fund without denting pensioners ' cash flow . |
7 | is was decided to purchase computer software , from a specialist house , which would enable Field Directors to have quite detailed inventory and operational performance data regarding the fleets under their control . |
8 | In very broad outline , the first stage ( 1908 ) was to pay , subject to means , a pension well below subsistence which would supplement income from other sources . |
9 | The way was now open to an orthodox Christian philosophy which would contain psychology , history and poetry within it , and which would emphasize the Middle Ages ; it would embrace the Gothic Revival and the Oxford or Anglo-Catholic Movement within the Church of England . |
10 | And one which would demand compensation . |
11 | The British government 's programme for the development of renewable energy has been massively oversubscribed , with developers submitting applications for projects which would generate electricity well in excess of the government 's target . |
12 | no more than the embodiment of administrative arrangements which would give order to a confused system and some of which had been recommended and accepted as desirable during the previous two decades . |
13 | This historical fascination inspired their limitless appetite for novel titbits of information on savage customs which would give substance to the shadowy forms of their own distant ancestors . |
14 | According to Mr Punch ‘ kicking out teeth ’ was a regular pastime among the good citizens of Oldham , and Salford — which would give birth to the Scuttlers at some later point in the 1880s — was already on the boil . |
15 | Yet a combination of gut anti-European prejudice and some strange part-ideological , part-mystical belief in a largely bogus economic sovereignty ( witness the events of last week ) prevents her from taking the one step which would give credibility to the fight against inflation . |
16 | 50MHz Vikings , which would give Sun a workstation performance rating in excess of 80 SPECmarks , are reportedly up and running , but are not ready for volume production . |
17 | The reformers ' ideal was a world ordered by intellectual logic ( which would give rise to fully blown scholasticism ) , by law and jurisdiction , by a centre at Rome . |
18 | However , firms already have to face uncertainty in the context of UCTA and the criteria used to assess whether a duty of care which would give rise to liability in tort is owed . |
19 | The merchant explained there would be a tableau which would give honour to the king as well as reflect the glory of the Goldsmith 's Guild , with huge screens on which the carpenters and masons had carved elaborate scenes . |
20 | And now GPs in affected areas are advising patients to consider having a vaccine , which would give immunity for up to six months . |
21 | A working group of senior parliamentarians broke the deadlock at the talks by endorsing a charter which would give equality in parliament to the majority Muslim population and transfer powers now enjoyed by the Maronite presidency to a cabinet headed by a Sunni Muslim . |
22 | But he did n't have time to speculate now as he strode across the office with the others following , down the ‘ corridor ’ between the screens and towards the double-doors directly ahead which would give access to the secondary staircase . |
23 | Despite his human limitations he managed to retrieve the underwater thorn which would give immortality , although it was stolen from him on his journey back to Uruk by a serpent . |
24 | We also talked about the new settlement being self-contained and integrated , but came I think to a consensus around the table that the level of employment provision in the new settlement should be related to the level of employment supply in the new settlement as opposed to a level of employment which would satisfy employment needs |
25 | We then realize that there is no dramatic originary event or ‘ cause ’ which would lend significance to all that has preceded it . |
26 | With the aid of the Sapherian wizards and Hotek , a renegade Priest of Vaul , he forged a great suit of black armour which would lend strength to his withered and fire-blasted body . |
27 | The first was an accelerated attempt to broaden the focus of the family planning programme to include the broader concept of family welfare planning — an ingenious verbal massage of an increasingly tarnished image , but one which did acknowledge the need for a better delivery system for family health including better preventative medicine , pre- and post-puerperal care and advice on household hygiene which would lower infant mortality rates and improve the health of the family . |
28 | In the face of vigorous protestation from the President and the Council that this was an unfair and flawed scheme of remuneration , which would lower quality and create mistrust between solicitor and client , and following unsuccessful judicial review proceedings on behalf of the profession , the regulations were set to become law in June . |
29 | London police chiefs are understood , however , already to have been planning an initiative early next year which would lower height requirements . |
30 | and th the so called democratic , you know , choice of all these poli , all these MP 's and what not which would comprise parliament and government and head of the Tory party at the time you know i it really their voices on the , on the the cabinet you know , they were , they were just destroyed ! |