Example sentences of "[pers pn] would [vb infin] for [art] " in BNC.
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1 | But I I really could n't I would never get the price I would want for the alphabet . |
2 | I would make for the Federal Republic . ’ |
3 | His friend , Mr Derek Harrod , said : ‘ I would vote for the official candidate . |
4 | That 's including Chippingfield if you had seen it as we saw it when we came here you would recognise how much work has gone into building the town because I was on the the council then I was asked if I would stand for the council which was then only a parish council there was no urban district council that was n't formed for four or five years afterwards and of course , we had to fight for lights everything that , er that we needed we had to fight for because there was no lighting on Netteswell Road where our children were going to school , and there were little ones . |
5 | She came to me one day and asked me if I would stand for the council , which I did . |
6 | I would hope for a little bipartisan support for the sort of work done , for example , by our drugs liaison officers abroad , who have brought about such successful seizures of heroin and other drugs in recent months . |
7 | I would go for every time better the devil you know for that reason alone really |
8 | If it was an ‘ either or ’ situation , I would go for a winch as it could be used for other jobs such as moving fallen trees or recovering other vehicles etc . |
9 | ‘ I would go for a newspaper and poster campaign . |
10 | An attacking partner would be ideal , and I would go for the left-handed Woolley , one of the most rapid-scoring or batsmen , particularly against fast bowling . |
11 | so I would go for the recommended and hope by this version of Windows it knows about Amstrads and will sort it out . |
12 | By now my courage had failed and I had to be helped up the steep , wooden steps , the executioner 's assistants whispering that if I made a good show they would make sure I would choke for no more than ten minutes . |
13 | But I told them they did n't want to worry , I would pay for the grin'stone . |
14 | ‘ If I was in the same situation again 100 times I would come for the same punch and back myself to clear the ball every time ’ |
15 | Saturday morning , and once again a fair and breezy day , so fair that I decided to give myself a holiday from writing , and go straight after breakfast to pick up the supplies I would need for the weekend . |
16 | With my family growing up I was needing more money and er that 's when I decided I would apply for a foreman 's job at . |
17 | It was an incentive I would say for the shop stewards . |
18 | Although it 's not a shape that I would recommend for a large picture , it can look very attractive used to decorate cards and calendars . |
19 | Certainly , field research of this kind is not something which I would recommend for the inexperienced . |
20 | Accordingly , I would ask for a periodic statement , preferably by the House of Lords , of some of the general principles upon which their charity decisions are founded … ’ |
21 | I would call for a ceasefire and a Middle East peace conference on the Gulf . |
22 | It is in this sense of extension of the basic , restricted theory , that I offer what I would call for the purposes of this discussion , the polytraumatic theory . |
23 | Er er well , I would read for an hour before I went to sleep . |
24 | But I would opt for a self-catering package which enable you to take full advantage of the excellent weekly markets . |
25 | There are many good makes of boots in this category though I think I would opt for a pair of Scarpa boots because they will accept the wonderful Yeti gaiters ( £50 ) and are excellent in their own right . |
26 | All things considered , in this particular case , I would opt for a hardcard for an easy life ! |
27 | Jean was tough and liked to drink ; she would endure for a long while yet . |
28 | In the early days she would go for an evening ‘ burn up ’ in her car around central London , leaving her armed Scotland Yard bodyguard behind . |
29 | The right hon. Member for Finchley said yesterday that she would vote for the Government because they were following a path that she favoured — in precisely the opposite direction . |
30 | One of them apparently recognised Ranulf and called out honey-phrased invitations as to what she would offer for a silver coin . |