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

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1 And she said it was so funny , she said , you 'd get the , the so the poorer people perhaps would use this shop and erm and yet she said , people I knew in the street erm that were Conservatives dealt at the Co-op , where it was I suppose the best buy and they were saving the divi you know , and we thought it was quite funny really .
2 The expected production of 3.6 million units of electricity annually would create much-needed income for the maintenance of the estate .
3 We can not suppose , however , that discrimination training is quite without effect — to do so would eliminate any possibility of explaining why acquired distinctiveness training should be superior to acquired equivalence training in producing differentiation .
4 The San Giorgio case is also of interest for present purposes in that it accepts that Community law does not prevent a national legal system from disallowing repayment of charges where to do so would entail unjust enrichment of the recipient , in particular where the charges have been incorporated into the price of goods and so passed on to the purchaser .
5 However , although unclear , it may be that the receiver has a limited duty to continue to trade where this would not jeopardise the chargee 's interests and a failure to do so would impose gratuitous damage on the company .
6 do n't say that a level crossing or where the road narrows , on approached any type of pedestrian crossing or where it would involve driving over an area marked with diagonal stripes to or che chevrons , do not overtake when you do so would force another vehicle to swerve or slow down , if in doubt do not overtake so where 'd you not overtake ?
7 To do so would imperil all law and order . ’
8 ACAS refused to recommend recognition partly because to do so would arouse strong opposition from the other unions with a risk of industrial action which would be damaging to the industry .
9 She was burning with curiosity and would have liked to question Madame Gebrec , but it was obvious that to do so would arouse painful memories .
10 But Cohn-Casson also found it impossible to side uncritically with Jews , because to do so would deny modern thinking , by placing tribal loyalties above the mandates of science .
11 you you personally would like some kind of hou some housing to be put there .
12 Walking with him smacked of an intimacy she wanted to avoid , apart from which the sight of them together would prompt all sorts of speculation among the villagers .
13 Yet it was also to emerge that for some antislavery controversialists ‘ impolicy ’ itself arose from abrogating the natural order in the form of the laws of liberal political economy ; consistency and principle together would bring greater prosperity .
14 The working time directive alone would impose crippling costs of more than £5 billion on United Kingdom employers .
15 In West Germany elections decided in constituencies alone would have similar results .
16 Viewed in this way , attempts to delimit pragmatics in the ways explored above would make little sense ; pragmatics would not be a component or level of linguistic theory but a way of looking afresh at the data and methods of linguistics .
17 It was anticipated that generating the action and control samples in the way described above would produce matched samples of approximately 50 dementia sufferers in each sample .
18 He spoke of his ‘ many happy memories ’ of the ground and said any move away would end first-class cricket in Middlesbrough .
19 Working harder for constituents individually would mean more surgeries , not to be easily provided if they were to cover the large constituencies necessitated by the STV .
20 ‘ would permit the continued use of the design approaches using ‘ shared space ’ which have been hailed as being highly successful in environmental and aesthetic terms ; the short sightlines which form a natural part of the ‘ intimate spaces ’ created in these schemes would cease at really low speeds to be short compared with stopping distances , and hence would pose little threat . ’
21 Within the Community both would have some protection from outside competition .
22 He also would like all correspondence about the future of the Government 's ‘ golden share ’ in Rover to be published .
23 That way also would lie public unrest and public peril .
24 And also would agree that team secretaries would n't be involved .
25 The devolution proposals that we have seen thus far would damage that union and separately damage Scotland , England and the whole of the United Kingdom .
26 If either of the Opposition parties was elected , many of the regiments that face amalgamation now would face certain disbandment .
27 Failure now would involve colossal cost later .
28 Thus the ‘ study ’ on which he embarked was , one suspects , confined to one aspect of the question : was the Church 's authority so committed by Casti Connubii of 1931 that any change now would discredit that authority ?
29 In the event of trouble , many of the non-union operators now would have easier access — in some cases for the first time — to the political system and its protective police arm .
30 we argued there that erm scale of migration was not necessary to be contained within Leeds and Bradford , to promote regeneration because we 're s we 're now , we have now exhausted all our brown field sites to the extent that we 've had to take land out of our greenbelt , but there we were looking at something in the order of four thousand dwellings in three dris districts , spread over fifteen years , and we might reasonably assume that they 'd come forward in a dispersed manner on a site by site basis er and be relatively small scale , certainly we would be looking at the local plans which flow from this alteration to make sure that will be the case , now a new settlement 's a completely different animal , you would have to come forward quickly otherwise it would not be regarded as a success , it would it would need wide publicity , perhaps across the whole region , maybe even beyond , it would be a a major attraction to anybody thinking of moving house er from Leeds to a a location which would be accessible to them to retain their employment in Leeds , so I think we were talking about two different things entirely , more than that Mr Brighton 's su suggested that fifteen hundred would not be an adequate scale , it would have to be , I think two thousand five hundred was his figure , er Mr Timothy 's suggested th the same sort of thinking , and Mr Brook to , that the the settlement would have to get bigger , erm which only compounds our problem , any any settlement which grew larger and larger and inevitably would contain more employment as well as housing would become more of a threat to the regeneration of Leeds and , perhaps to a lesser extent Bradford , and it 's on
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