Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] would [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He 'd worried , often enough , that he had n't got the measure of Mrs Ames , that their friendship would one day founder on a simple misunderstanding .
2 Ann thought her daughter would one day emerge from all this .
3 That same year , Schoenberg completed his Variations for Orchestra , Op. 31 , which Karajan would one day remove from the concert-hall to the recording studio to make one of the artistically most successful and technologically most radical of all twentieth-century gramophone recordings .
4 |L| is more precisely the height at which |Ri| would equal unity if the profiles were unchanged by the stratification .
5 Even he did n't consider such deeds heroic ( heroes are usually frightened men who rise to the occasion ) , but saw himself as just a reckless fool whose luck would one day run out .
6 He was describing the kind of everyday ecstasy with which his paintings would one day be imbued .
7 What faith would these people have in our system of administration of justice ?
8 What effect would that policy have on the unemployment figures ?
9 What effect would last night 's regrettable occurrence have upon the morning 's debate on immigration , to which Mr Clarke was expected to reply ?
10 Given that industrial democracy , defined as the ultimate right and duty of the men and women working in an industrial enterprise to call management to account for its performance , and , if that performance does not satisfy them , to replace management , is desirable in principle and as a means of making the efficient conduct of the enterprise their natural concern ; recognising that the rights of use attaching to ownership , whether in the private or public sector , are inalienable ; recognising the value in general of competition as a means of keeping production and provision sensitive to public needs and tastes , and as a means of relating the distribution of resources to them ; to consider ( i ) in what sort of industrial organisation would industrial democracy be feasible ; ( ii ) how far and in what circumstances would the adoption of such a form of organisation be feasible ; ( iii ) by what means should its adoption be promoted and how long would it take to establish it as a characteristic feature in the industrial scene ; ( iv ) what part should trade unions play in its promotion and adoption and what changes would that part require in their functions as they are commonly understood ; and ( v ) where in the case of a particular industry , or organisation , the general interest requires that accountability should be to the public at large , considered for example as consumers or users of goods produced or beneficiaries from services provided , what compensatory measures should be introduced so as to make good as far as possible the permanent denial to employees of a right which is in principle generally desirable ?
11 The key question is : what impact would Labour policies have on unemployment and the economic well-being of the country ?
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