Example sentences of "would have [verb] on the " in BNC.
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1 | Erm but er unless I I may repeat one or two of the things I 'd have said on the phone I 'm bound to do that , er the three things that are gon na be decided here today really is you if you and I erm you 've got inside information of course , er if you and I agree that er is the is the platform for you to earn some good money . |
2 | It was almost impossible to think that a couple of hours ago she 'd have climbed on the rostrum in the Forum and denounced Prince Nicolo Sabatini to all of Rome . |
3 | I 'd like to move near him , but I 'd have to get on the Council list and I do n't know if I 'd qualify . ’ |
4 | Two MIGs sighted in centre six F , closing on the place which I 'd have to get on the border of five A. |
5 | Er I will have explained er er I certainly would 've explained on the phone that er part of the contract requires them to give us a list of prospective advertisers . |
6 | The French psychiatrist Pierre Deniker , records that a substance closely related to promethazine and later known as chlorpromazine was synthesized in 1950 and ‘ would have remained on the shelves had the surgeon and physiologist Henri Laborit not asked the manufacturer for a drug with central effects stronger than those of promethazine ’ . |
7 | ‘ Men who , under any other pair of hands , would have remained on the injured list for three or four weeks , Tom would have fit again in three or four days … |
8 | Instead , they would have to rely on the insurance cover held by the nuclear industry , backed by a special government fund . |
9 | All knew that they would have to pass through what has been described as a maelstrom , and that they would have to rely on the seamanship of their coxswain to reach the relative safety of open water ; there would be no second chance in conditions which were described as the worst in living memory . ’ |
10 | Davy at the end of his life remarked that the service of the laboratory was a service of danger ; that few chemists could expect to retain a quick eye and a steady hand for very long , and would have to rely on the hands and eyes of assistants . |
11 | The criticism came from the former senior chief inspector , Mr. Eric Bolton , who pointed out that , under Labour 's proposals , the inspectorate , instead of advising the Secretary of State directly , would have to rely on the secondment of some senior inspectors . |
12 | At the very least , he would have to reckon on the 21 votes in the Cabinet being stacked up against him . |
13 | Thus , whereas in a face-to-face meeting I can say I 'm Joe Bloggs , on the telephone I must say This is Joe Bloggs or Joe Bloggs is speaking with third person verb agreement ( but see Schegloff , 1979a ) ; in contrast in Tamil we would have to say on the telephone the equivalent of Joe Bloggs am speaking , with first person verb agreement . |
14 | Well I I would have said on the phone that under normal circumstances if you 're salaried or have been salaried I do n't talk people into this unless they 're a certain age . |
15 | Much would have depended on the distances involved and on the modes of transport available as already mentioned above ( p. 44 ) . |
16 | In the succession of sons to their fathers ' benefices , reform would have depended on the bishops and , of course , the clergy themselves . |
17 | topographies will have become reduced in all the continents , erosion will have slowed up , and Only very mature , multicycled sediments would have accumulated on the continental areas . |
18 | I felt that after my performance with Rose he would have called on the services of Jim Oakley for any further trouble . |
19 | In other words , the EP would have to take on the role of approving Community legislation similarly to the way in which national parliaments currently make national laws . |
20 | Then we would have to go on the run , move from place to place , rely on the people to feed and shelter us . |
21 | The major one is that the wing , had it been left there , would have snagged on the underside of the Kilcharran as it surfaced and tilted the fuselage , maybe to so acute an angle as to make access to this damned bomb difficult or impossible . ’ |
22 | She watched the keys fall , noting that they fell more slowly than they would have done on the Earth . |
23 | I was uneasy in the dark and would have turned on the torch except that after only one fifth of the journey I had used half my batteries . |
24 | He was also a man of short stature ; he would have to climb on the beam at the front of the door to push the bolt home . |
25 | If prostitution were to be stopped they would have to work on the rice fields on a starvation salary . ’ |
26 | Well it would n't made any difference cos we would have come on the Sunday anyway . |
27 | Any one of those things would have been unusual in itself ; jointly , and in a humbler personage , it would have verged on the scandalous . |
28 | Such a missile would have targeted on the engines , not the fuselage and , more importantly , there are no vessels in the area . |
29 | The market price for these purposes is the price which in normal business dealings those goods would have fetched on the date when the buyer should have accepted the goods . |
30 | If Pound had attended to Thomas Hardy 's marriage to Florence Emily Dugdale within two years of the death of his first wife , Emma , there can be little doubt that this is the verdict he would have passed on the transaction . |