Example sentences of "[pron] would [verb] the whole " in BNC.
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1 | Established to tackle thorny problems , it was hardly surprising that , in the words of Lord Shawcross , ‘ if you could n't find a solution which commanded general support , then at least you 'd find a way which would enable the whole matter to be put on the back shelf . ’ |
2 | St. P. J. Eymard , founder of the Blessed Sacrament Congregation , regarded the Eucharist as the fire which would set the whole world alight . |
3 | The League 's National Council submitted a drastically revised statement to its Derby Conference at Whitsun , calling on the TUC and the Labour Party " to formulate a policy which would rally the whole working class movement against Fascism and Capitalism " . |
4 | However the conference had felt it advisable to avoid this and the Labour Party and the TUC were asked instead to formulate a policy which would rally the whole working-class movement against Fascism and Capitalism . |
5 | Critics of the dual state thesis argue that in practice public expenditures can be classified according to their function only through a post hoc evaluation of their consequences or by knowing which organizations implemented the programmes ( which would make the whole schema tautologous ) . |
6 | The procedure is often of great value , but it 's suggested that for two reasons it should only be used in urgent cases — both out of consideration for Land Registry staff , and to avoid the possibility of their being swamped by too many such applications , resulting in delay , which would defeat the whole purpose of the operation . |
7 | It would inherently end up a large enquiry some somewhere along the line , which would frustrate the whole purpose of of the planning system . |
8 | On arriving at Dingle , he had expected to be given charge of a spoilt , overdressed menina who would spend the whole voyage in her cot with her maidservant running about in attendance , so he had been pleasantly surprised to find in Sara an odd mixture of childish enthusiasm and womanly grace . |
9 | He 'd play last across with the trains , no wonder he was killed by a train , he had many near misses , he always appears on the anniversary of his death and you would see the whole incident in startling detail . ’ |
10 | ‘ If it were n't for the fact that we have to spend time and pay lawyers to deal with it , we would find the whole thing laughable , ’ E&Y 's marketing partner David Wilson told ACCOUNTANCY . |
11 | Unknown to fame , we would see the whole world turn back into an Eden about us … |
12 | If at conversion Christians castoff their ability to be angry , they would shed the whole panoply of their emotional world : their joy , their love , their sense of wonder and awe . |
13 | She sometimes thought that if they went somewhere hot and beachy as most people did — the Seychelles , the Maldives , the Caribbean — they would spend the whole day swimming or sunbathing . |
14 | Then he would envelop the whole hand in his , clenching it into a clinching argument , a QED fist . |
15 | It would make the whole exercise entirely pointless , but she did n't care . |
16 | Because if if people took advantage of the of these facilities it would make the whole business an awful lot cheaper for them . |
17 | There was no doubt that if it did spread to the nearest stack it would set the whole hayfield alight in a very short time . |
18 | If such a total were set down , it would blow the whole review out of the water . |
19 | One objection to the BBC 's plan is that it would occupy the whole band from 88 to 108 MHz , leaving no room for new developments such as ‘ community radio ’ . |
20 | It would boost the whole team psychologically . |