Example sentences of "[adj] would have [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This would have no doubt involved stories of my forcing myself on him — something Sarah would have condemned . |
2 | This would have no impact on the fusion rate , but a tokamak can contain alpha particles more easily if they start their life travelling in the same direction as the magnetic field that contains the plasma . |
3 | This would have the merit of being convertible into hard currencies and enable the import of desperately needed consumer goods from the West , and it would help soak up excess ordinary roubles on the domestic market . |
4 | This would have the advantage of removing both the restriction as to the victim and the limitation to women , but the Criminal Law Revision Committee thought that this would lead to an effective narrowing of the scope of infanticide . |
5 | This would have the advantage of allowing forward planning in terms of an overall residential training programme for 1988 and 1989 . |
6 | A graphics display screen could be used to switch rapidly from one map to another ; this would have the advantage of economy ( in that costly high-quality paper maps would not be needed by each participant ) and would be one way of ensuring that everyone was looking at the right map at any particular time . |
7 | This would have the benefit of forcing the courts to articulate more openly the premises on which they are reasoning . |
8 | This would have the effect of rendering the reactive vitrinite component inert and therefore thermally more stable , with the result that subsequent reburial would not exceed the temperature threshold for hydrocarbon-producing reactions to occur . |
9 | The Higher Labour Court decided that having extramarital affairs with married women was not a violation of the contract of employment that would justify a dismissal , as this would have the effect of punishing someone for interfering in marital relations , which the German Code of Civil Procedure would not permit . |
10 | First , an animal might direct altruistic acts towards individuals with which it had been raised ; in most cases this would have the effect of directing the acts towards relatives . |
11 | This would have the effect of reducing the value of the empty cottage by £5,000 . |
12 | While the ability of organised skilled workers to restrict entry to their trade and to develop defensive strategies probably means their wages rose more sharply when the economy turned up , and fell less quickly on the downturns , this would have the effect of flattening fluctuations rather than of misdirecting trends . |
13 | This would have the effect of segregating and splitting the market and would be likely to attract the attention of the Commission , particularly if one of the licensees objects ( perhaps the one having the least advantageous terms in its licence agreement ) . |
14 | This would have the effect of either : ( 1 ) turning a " non-speaking " decision into a 'speaking " one , where the expert had not been specifically instructed beforehand to produce a speaking decision ; or ( 2 ) giving more detail to an existing 'speaking " decision . |
15 | It may well lead to a major exodus of general practitioners from the capital ; this would have an effect opposite to the one Mrs Bottomley claims to seek . |
16 | In the early stages after sentencing , supervision would be strict , and because of this would have an effect upon the probation officers ' traditional , caring function , emphasising instead a more custodial role . |
17 | And of course when you was er was n't on guard duty at the f early evening , course there used to be used to pop into the Peel and have a couple of halves or some would have a pint and there was a chap in , in the Home , Home Guard he , he used to be able to play the piano so we used to have a singsong in there for a social , you know . |
18 | Such would have a tendency to dry out or cool according to changing climatic conditions . |
19 | These would have a life of up to 5 years , before being redesigned . |
20 | These would have a foil seal which would be automatically pierced by a cutting edge before use . |
21 | In it the poor would have a voice and a share , but would not be able to outweigh or vote away the interests of the propertied and the wealthy . |
22 | Then m can not itself be irreducible [ since such an m would have a product decomposition of the required kind , namely m itself ] . |
23 | Victories would put the Irish on 17 points , Denmark on 16 with Spain still on 13 although the Spanish would have a game in hand . |
24 | They fought for an hour and it seemed that neither would have the mastery . |
25 | ‘ It stands to reason a man like that would have a partner . ’ |
26 | On the other hand , if the income as it arose in each of the five years was paid out to Mr X that would have no tax consequences : he could not be assessed under TA 1988 , s739 as he is not ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom . |
27 | That would have an effect . |
28 | That would have the advantages of specifying with precision what the parties have agreed , thus avoiding misunderstanding , and of enabling the justices to define with greater precision points at which they may have tentatively determined to depart from the agreed proposals ( post , pp. 277H — 278B ) . |
29 | That would have the advantage of getting rid of both car and wife at the same time . |
30 | That would have the merit of simplicity , but would it strike the right note socially ? |