Example sentences of "it would [verb] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I mean , we thought it 'd rain this year so it 's more
2 ‘ I thought it 'd last another year , but wi ’ the rain this summer I shall have to get it fixed .
3 Cos if you did n't have that it 'd make this room more viable in as much as erm , the point of view of doing doing catering and , functions and all the rest of it .
4 ‘ If you grew something like carrots it 'd make some sense .
5 ‘ It would be no trouble for us , maybe , but it 'd trouble those gorgios who pass along the road and they 'd start complaining about us .
6 It controls many trade unions including some of the big confederations , most notably the Shanghai General Labour Union , a sort of T U C really , erm for , do n't know whether it would bear much relation to the modern T U C in Britain , the erm , the sort of confederation uniting all of the unions in Shanghai , controlled by the Communist Party .
7 He said that Buthelezi 's approach threatened to bring him into " direct confrontation " with the government in Pretoria.The ANC said that Buthelezi 's purpose was to sabotage national negotiations and that it would boycott any referendum called to test the plan .
8 When lit it would warm both sides and make the atmosphere cosy .
9 It would prevent more tragedies like Michael Watson 's and bring back the skill to the game .
10 It would ban all advertising of tobacco products except at the point of sale , ie the newsagent 's shop or supermarket counter .
11 If there were an art fair in Gambia it would bring more business than London . ’
12 It would bring fewer gains to the likes of water companies , which suffer high rates of effective taxation through ACT because capital allowances reduce their mainstream tax bills .
13 Auguste had added the course in the interests of the Prince of Wales ; it was to be served virtually at the same time as the entrée , in defiance of the rules , in the hope it would attract less attention .
14 Because of the pressure on Drigg this was the most urgent requirement , and it was hoped that it would attract less opposition than the Billingham mine .
15 Council leader John Williams said he fully supported the scheme and hoped it would attract more tourists to the area .
16 It would bankrupt any economy .
17 But it , I can quite see that it would bother some people .
18 With luck , it would contain enough information to trace its owner .
19 I ca n't seem to find a copy of any report which was produced as a result of this survey , and I have no recollection of ever having received a copy , but presumably it would contain enough data for your new placement student to re-input .
20 The project has drawn heavy criticism from environmental and human rights activists , who warned that it would submerge some forests and erode others , disrupt fisheries , increase the risk of malaria and other insect-borne diseases , and fail to supply useful amounts of water to those areas of drought-stricken Gujarat most in need of it .
21 Although it was especially developed for babies at risk of allergy , many nutritionists believe that it would benefit all babies to follow a similar , gradual pattern of weaning , If your family is not allergy prone , you can adapt it to suit your needs , circumstances and baby .
22 Alpha is a group is University of Ulster graduates who feel it would benefit all Northern Ireland graduates in the catering and tourism fields to keep in touch , both socially and on a professional level .
23 It would benefit many pensioners who can well afford the fee and would mean that other licence holders would have to pay £116 for their colour licence .
24 Because of course if you were to tape record analytic sessions , it would change that nature of the , of the analysis .
25 It would change all sorts of things .
26 Chris Patten is among the sceptics : ‘ Even if it ( investment ) were to be successful and encourage a 40 or 50 per cent increase in the use of rail , it would make damn-all difference to the growth in road traffic — it would just take a few percentage points off the top . ’
27 In practice one suspects that it would make little sense to the participants in any of these cases to ask who is really being supported : .
28 If my toothache were an event analogous to , but entirely separated from the neurophysiological process that accompanies it , it would make little sense going to a dentist in search of relief .
29 It would make little sense in this context to increase the categories of sexual assault simply to maintain gender specificity .
30 One view holds it might be worth preserving only information derived from the telecommunications record , but that it would make little sense to keep it all .
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