Example sentences of "[conj] it would make [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I had no idea what having a baby would mean , only that it would make escape from Roundhay impossible . |
2 | That it would make life a lot happier for Manningham if he closed the deal at the price offered . |
3 | It was just that it would make life a little easier . |
4 | If the public had been sickened by the carnage at the Olympic Stadium , the next spectacle to fill their television screens would be in such spectacular technicolor and DestructaVision that it would make Rambo look like a Disney movie . |
5 | It has been argued that it would make sense for whoever runs the train services to also take responsibility for the track . |
6 | It would need to be flying with 70 per cent capacity to break even ; for every percent above that it would make $250,000 . |
7 | I mean , I do n't think anyone took any risks , and we were all wearing gloves anyway because of the state he was in — I would be worried that it would make people panic unnecessarily . |
8 | I love shops anyway , so it would make sense to stock products that do n't damage the environment . ’ |
9 | More gardens to the left , so it would make sense to suppose that you 'd come in from the right , leaving your car in the road at the end of the row . |
10 | Kennedy 's advisers opposed this solution because it would again single out Britain amongst the European states for special treatment ; it would fuel de Gaulle 's dislike for NATO ; and it would make Britain 's entry into Europe , which was part of the State Department 's policy , even less likely . |
11 | For example , " walked " might be substituted in 1. , but it would make nonsense in the other three contexts . |
12 | If judges were seen to pick and choose among legislation , enforcing only those statutes they approved , this would defeat the pragmatist 's goal because it would make things not better but much worse . |