Example sentences of "[that] [pron] would be [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 The prosecuting counsel said that nothing would be heard to criticise the victim 's character , who was timid and nervous .
2 The company 's advisers , Baring Brothers , believe that nothing would be served by making Sir Derek a scapegoat at this stage .
3 He also urged party members not to resign over the issue , pointing out that nothing would be gained from such action .
4 Despite the well-deserved victory against the Premier League outfit , Cambridge chairman Reg Smart said that nothing would be announced for at least another 24 hours .
5 Miss Fogerty assured her that nothing would be disclosed and slipped out of the side door .
6 Enough work so that I could enjoy it but not so much work that I would be fed up .
7 A form arrived with the instruction ‘ State exactly how loss occurred ’ , and I wrote ‘ Lord Haig 's dog Wasp and I were sitting together on a sofa when I discovered he was eating my sweater ’ with the gravest doubts that I would be believed .
8 I was told by the FO in London that I would be met at Johannesburg airport — since British aircraft could not land in Rhodesia while UDI existed — and would be conveyed to the British Consulate there where I could have a rest .
9 I felt relieved that I had my scar from the fight at the summer party and so looked the same as everybody else — I was afraid of appearing different or clever which meant that I would be noticed by the Corporals and picked on by all the others .
10 I had set my sights on getting a good position in training so that I would be sent to the 2ème Régiment Étranger de Parachutistes .
11 I felt scared that I would be seen as crazy — that I might even go crazy : that I would begin to see little green men , jump off a tower in the belief I could fly , or just sit in a corner humming ‘ Om ’ .
12 6 Later , in a more morbid vein , he confessed : " I suspected all along that there was little possibility that I would be forgiven for making known publicly that Stalin disgusted me , and that I could not stomach the Nazi-Soviet pact and the events in Finland .
13 After travelling ‘ with knitting ’ for many years , I knew that I would be made welcome when I arrived .
14 Strangely enough , at no time did I have real doubts that I would be elected , and this determined my public attitude during the three successive ballots that were necessary .
15 Unfortunately there was to be no 200 metres event , but there were some invitation events scheduled including a 60 metres , and having won that event at the Cosford Games I thought that I would be selected .
16 Even allowing for the cost of the curtain tape and cotton required , I calculated that I would be overcharged by £80 .
17 I was told that I would be given the money when I got to Singapore .
18 ‘ I like the exercise and , besides , I have two friends down the road in a Land Rover , ’ I said , implying that I would be given a lift .
19 The two of them told me that no formalities were required , that I would simply be received in a small private room , and that there would even be the possibility that I would be given a glass of sherry — which presented some difficulty since I am teetotal .
20 The wood opposite was smoking with dusk again and I was looking forward to seeing the orderly , when my door was opened and I was told that I would be moved across to the main camp at once .
21 ‘ I knew there was a great possibility that I would be tortured .
22 It was unlikely that I would be offered a safe seat , but I might , with luck , be given a chance in a marginal .
23 Do you think , Mr Erlich , that if I went to your Embassy to request a detailed briefing concerning the work in my country of Mr Harry Lawrence , Central Intelligence Agency , that I would be shown anything , other than the door … ? ’
24 Little did I know that I would be confronted with the loss of a loved one , my husband Norman , so soon and unexpectedly .
25 It , it depends on , on your individual circu , if your sister has a baby for you , she 's unlikely to say that I would be recompensed for my loss of earnings .
26 All along that awful journey I 'd been tortured by the thought that someone might have found and moved the dinghy and that I would be trapped in this hellish marsh .
27 I thought about the possibility but when my friends kept saying that I would be chosen I said that I thought the selectors would go for more experience .
28 The Substitute made up his mind that nobody would be allowed to interfere .
29 She need n't have worried that she would be recognized .
30 That might in itself imply that she felt for some reason that she would be suspected , or perhaps she knew who the killer was and preferred to keep quiet .
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