Example sentences of "[noun] would have [vb pp] a " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | His last words would have made a fine song title . |
2 | Politeness and kindness would have constituted a refusal . |
3 | Opinion polls suggested throughout the campaign that Labour would have stood a better chance with the Scottish lawyer at the helm , and he has powerful support on the backbenches , especially among fellow Scots . |
4 | ‘ That opinion was largely based on the fact that in Robin Cook , Labour would have boasted a senior Cabinet minister with good understanding and enthusiasm for racing . |
5 | He believes fans would have preferred a more lavish packaging for ‘ Bizarro ’ and that its fierce edge might have been a reaction to signing with RCA . |
6 | First , had proportional representation been in force in 1983 , then the Conservatives would not have been able to form a government on their own and coalition would have forced a moderation of policies . |
7 | The latter half of the sixteenth century does , arguably , represent a significant turning point in the development of the hierarchy : until that time one can argue that its evolution had been largely functional , that the nature of the hierarchy ensured that those who reached the highest learned offices would have received a thorough grounding in the necessary sciences through both their education and their teaching , and practical training in the application of the law through holding several important kadiliks ; but that after that time , that is , from toward the end of the sixteenth century , the elaboration of the hierarchy was much more negative from the point of view both of learning and of good administration , being essentially an attempt to provide jobs and honours for an ever-increasing number of those seeking both . |
8 | ‘ Do you reckon Steen would have found a replacement ? ’ |
9 | — that in Newham each such client cost £92 a week less in the community , and in Ipswich £108 less ( even with Home Support Project input ) than in an institution , assuming that two-thirds of the clients would have entered a hospital and one-third residential accommodation ( see Table 3.5 ) . |
10 | After Alan Duff , very few teachers ' books would have stood a chance . ’ |
11 | And no doubt other authors would have chosen a different balance of topics — more invertebrates and light vertebrates perhaps . |
12 | Surely , if the French incursion was serious , the Prussians would have sent a more urgent messenger ? |
13 | If he 'd left it Mrs Blakey would have made a fuss , she 'd have wanted to take his temperature , she 'd have asked questions he could n't answer . |
14 | Chant would have given a good deal to break the bastard 's nose so he bled on it . |
15 | The pressure on the welders would have involved a very high rejection rate — a problem overcome by robot welding . |
16 | Some referees would have produced a red card instantly , but Alan Flood decided that the challenge only merited a yellow . |
17 | A significant number of subjects ( 7/37 ) , however , had food reflux that was outside one standard deviation from the mean , whereas only one of these subjects would have had a positive reflux score by measuring acid alone . |
18 | The abrupt cessation of homage without some alternative ceremony would have divided a kingdom into two distinct parts : those parts held by laymen , for which homage was owed to the king , and those parts held by clergy , for which homage was forbidden . |
19 | Even without Vietnam Western European nations would have taken a more independent line from America . |
20 | Price Waterhouse 's UK practice would have experienced a negative growth rate in fee income in the year to June 1992 , if it had not been for the firm 's corporate recovery arm . |
21 | Brought up at a time when military aircraft would have seemed a fantasy , he later became an expert on one of the most complicated of signal functions , air-land co-operation . |
22 | Instead of a free subscription to an obscure journal ( which came with the registration fee ) many listeners would have preferred a decent abstract list — not to mention fewer unimaginative and time-worn presentations . |
23 | Once Deano/Whelan/Wallace had built up an understanding then the goals would have come a lot easier . |
24 | It 's improbable that a male college would have achieved a similar effect with men or women . |
25 | To have released Meehan from seven years of wrongful imprisonment , recommended a free pardon for him , and then to have arrested and charged Waddell for the same crime would have required a greater degree of resolution than either of them possessed . |
26 | The proposal would have ended a system of low taxation on land sales which had helped fuel a property boom since the late 1980s . |
27 | This proposal would have involved a different , immensely complicated , and , for suspects , terrifying new caution which could easily fatally have undermined the whole rule . |
28 | In any case , a shotgun fired into the undertaker 's neck at close range would have made a real mess ; we would n't be looking at just a cupful of blood . |
29 | Sensible parents would have chosen a hill station near us , rented a house , and sent us every year to the same school . |
30 | Conservative group leader Tony Richmond accused finance committee chair Jan Taylor of saying the council would have set a higher budget if it were not for government spending constraints . |