Example sentences of "he would have [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It was clear , too , that Kanhai , who had taken over the leadership from Sobers , was coming to the end of his career and that whoever took over from him would have the opportunity for an extended run in the job if he were successful .
2 He was in a position in which he would have every opportunity of gaining knowledge of the customers ' business and influence over the customers ' .
3 Having been in partnership with Sam in the building of the Russell , he would have every reason to keep in close touch with her .
4 It had burned a whole year long , and the half of another , the image of Linnet gliding down the aisle behind Gemma like a lovely abandoned swan so engraved on Ben Braithwaite 's memory that he would have no peace , no rest — he 'd vowed — until he had possessed her .
5 I thought he would have no chance of life if his father Heathcliff took him to live at Wuthering Heights .
6 He would have no sleep now , just home to eat and then to work .
7 But Hunt said that if the race were officially started and the cars lined up on the grid , he would have no choice but to race .
8 Even if the new President had entered his official residence , he would have no standing in his own community , and what , after all , is the point of a Maronite President if it is not to integrate the Maronites within the traditional confessional system which — readjusted in the Muslims ' favour — the Tayif agreement perpetuates ?
9 A man who wished to build a villa in Benghazi , but was frustrated by his expectation that , if he did , he would have no protection strong enough to prevent immediate expropriation , explained the collapse of his hopes for a more elegant and civilized life .
10 He would make that clear , or else he would have no part in the raid .
11 For this reason , he is unable to support birth control by means of contraceptives , but he would have no hesitation in recommending self-control .
12 And , casting an eye towards the world championships in August , Backley insisted that if the injury hung around he would have no hesitation in pulling out of the year 's big event in Stuttgart to prevent further damage .
13 He would also be seeking compensation and if the authority made no offer he would have no hesitation in suing for a five-figure sum .
14 He would have no difficulty finding another situation in Florence . ’
15 It occurred to him forcibly that he would have no objection at all to extending this romantic episode further .
16 If Haser could be brought down by the Swiss for money-laundering , so the theory went , then he would have no reason to dig the hole he was in any deeper by embarrassing the CIA with gratuitous revelations about the agency 's arms deals with Saddam Hussein .
17 He would have no reason for suicide ? ’
18 By relating belief to duty in this fashion , Gandhi is able to claim that he would have no compunction under Swarāj , self-governing India , in recommending those who had no objection to talking up arms , to fight for their country .
19 Keegan said he would have no worries about pitching in Pavel Srnicek for shoulder-injury victim Wright .
20 He hoped that he would have no need .
21 It was that if I wanted to set up in the business of manufacturing coffins , he would have no objections .
22 Semenov promised me that he would have a word at the highest level , with Yury Vladimirovich Andropov .
23 Well before the evening really got under way , he would have a couple of hundred roubles in his pocket , to be converted into a night of vodka-drinking and celebration .
24 He would have a majority .
25 Ebullient , and with a broad grin , Williams early sensed his own powers — at sixteen he told a friend that he would have a fellowship of the University of Wales , an 1851 exhibition , a D.Sc. , and an FRS by his middle thirties .
26 The previous Secretary of State — the right hon. Member for Bath ( Mr. Patten ) , now chairman of the Conservative party — had promised two years ago that he would have a look at SSAs ; that promise , however , came to nothing , as has every other Government promise relating to local administration .
27 In the end , if this crime turned out to be something more than an abortive mugging , he would have a portrait of the victim and through that portrait some indication of why he had become one .
28 But he would have a drink and a warm bed awaiting him when he got rid of it .
29 Often he would shave it off , but the next day he would have a beard just the same .
30 Nails had hoped Biddy would have foregone her offer to meet him out of school the next day , or at least be late so that he would have a chance of escaping her clutches , but when he came out she was there outside the gate on her motor-bike , and there was no escaping .
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