Example sentences of "[verb] thought that [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | We know that the actual reorganization is going to cost thirty million I would have thought that every possible drainage problem could ever West Sussex could easily be rectified with thirty million pounds and we could all name a project er on which we would like to spend thirty million pounds . |
2 | I would have thought that a standard missile would have ensured that a plane it brought down would not have struck the sea with its fuselage relatively intact but in a thousand pieces . |
3 | One would have thought that a deep incompatibility should have become apparent to them between what they believed about the equality of human beings and the misogynist , or at least highly patriarchal , nature of this myth . |
4 | I would have thought that a large company like Fender could supply this information with their products as a matter of course , together with technical specifications and notes on the safe usage of this product — after all , I seem to recall several musicians being electrocuted when playing their electric guitars . |
5 | But who would have thought that a humble human could do these calculations ? |
6 | All in all she got herself in such a state that it was a distinct let-down when she was met by Mike Booker , the team manager , although why she should have thought that the reigning world champion would bother to come and meet a flight at Nice airport was a question she was n't too happy to answer . |
7 | One would have thought that the Great Depression years in the United States had provided a suitable testing ground for the efficacy of the real-balance effect , but , as Patinkin pointed out at an early stage in the development of the neoclassical synthesis , a large increase in real balances appeared to be accompanied by a large fall in output . |
8 | I should have thought that the present requirement of the whole civilised world is relatively simple . |
9 | Unless you happen to have a racetrack in your back gardens , I would have thought that the sheer frustration of never really being able to stretch a car like this is one of the main drawbacks to owning one . |
10 | You 'd have thought that the enormous Ballroom was on fire . |
11 | But for 15 minutes before the curtains went up the audience must have thought that the obnoxious Sheriff of Nottigham was sitting immediately behind me … |
12 | Who would have thought that the dapper VIC REEVES and the delicate DANNII MINOGUE would shop on the same sartorial street ? |
13 | I should have thought that the hon. Lady would now recognise that the description that I gave was entirely apposite . |
14 | I should have thought that the hon. Member for Islington , South and Finsbury , as much as my hon. Friends , would strongly support that . |
15 | I should have thought that the hon. Gentleman would apologise to the House for the last Labour Government 's appalling record . |
16 | I should have thought that the hon. Gentleman , who cares about these things , would welcome that . |
17 | You would have thought that the natural reaction of the teacher would have been that we ought to contact the father — better him than the nutty grandmother . |
18 | Some senior managers had thought that a major change in BP Oil 's portfolio might solve some of the problems . |
19 | I was n't deceived , for Nour had been kind when I had been what he called ‘ good ’ , and I had thought that a new Nour had been born who was made for me , designed for all my needs and desires , and we would be unchangingly happy together until the end of time . |
20 | Alice had thought that a white-haired man was sitting in the chair next to her . |
21 | Obviously he had thought that the mere sight of them would frighten her into standing quietly and listening , but he was wrong . |
22 | I had thought that the ghastly images of that awful day had been burned forever in the minds of anyone who saw them . |
23 | When Ewen Mackay suggested that they had met before , I had thought that the other man had countered with a faintly wary look . |
24 | The main reason why scholars have thought that the forged passages conferring the primacy were already in the documents in 1072 is that , if they were not there , Lanfranc could not have said that these papal letters were the ultimum robur of his whole case . |