Example sentences of "would [adv] have [to-vb] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Its members would effectively have to buy milk supplies from their main competitor .
2 There was no electronic monitor , so Shelley would just have to check pulse and blood-pressure regularly .
3 Soon , she felt , she would just have to relinquish control and let it carry her .
4 The local council in Aldershot ruled that soldiers serving in the Gulf would not have to pay poll tax ; but Whitehall refused to follow America 's example of allowing the troops in the Gulf not to pay income tax .
5 Already there were six in one bed , three at the top and three at the bottom , and they would soon have to make room for Matt , the boy born before she took in Corrie .
6 If the WCC were not to be involved , then we would also have to fund air fares ( say £1000 ) .
7 Before that was done , Nichola Jane Davies , a barrister employed as a senior Crown prosecutor by the Merseyside area of the Crown Prosecution Service , who was representing the prosecution before that court , had explained to the court that the justices would now have to hear evidence before considering whether Mr. Bell should be remanded in custody or on bail .
8 It was made clear to me that I would n't have to take part in any act detrimental to my country 's cause . ’
9 She gave Gloria money so that she would n't have to pretend Dot was a babe-in-arms .
10 When her call came through , however , and she picked up the phone and said , ‘ Hello , ’ she realised that she would n't have to ask Lubor when Ven was coming back — because she already knew .
11 Jane Postlethwaite would n't have to give evidence .
12 in case me number one son comes round starving again , I 'll have a pan of stew for him to dip into , plus he left half inch in bottom so he would n't have to wash pan
13 He would simply have to perform homage in person .
14 Borrowings remain high at £457m , for gearing of 51 p.c. , but the group has squeezed capital from the housebuilding side and , if trading unexpectedly worsened , it would simply have to sell prize assets instead of peripheries .
15 If there is any truth in this , and it seems quite convincing , somebody would surely have to make way for him .
16 Further expansion would then have to take place away from the present urban area … .
17 The consequences of a low initial limit was that a solicitor would either have to stop work at an early stage and wait for an extension to be authorised , which ‘ is time-consuming , causes delay and raises difficulties with clients , ’ or work on without an extension .
18 Although the police do not need to be certain that a person has heard or seen what is going on before they can call for quiet under the Act ( since it is sufficient that they have reasonable cause to believe that an offence is being committed ) , they would afterwards have to conduct house to house enquiries before they could truthfully say that the conduct was actually heard or seen by a bystander .
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