Example sentences of "would have [art] [adj -er] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You 'd hoped that after a love scene with you I 'd have no further interest in Rob .
2 We 'd have a better chance to find reasonably paid jobs in London .
3 If I was The John Dyson , do n't you think I 'd have a better chance of getting theatre seats ?
4 But I had this instinct that you 'd have a better chance if you first spent some time with me — ’
5 If Mrs Marr knew a bit of human anatomy , for example , if she 'd had a medical training or been a PE teacher something like that , she 'd have a better chance of being competent , by which I mean lethal .
6 I 'd have a better tan than her at this rate , all the outdoor living I was doing .
7 If there was flies and rats over every dead thing round here , we 'd have a bigger problem than what we 've got . ’
8 ‘ I thought she 'd have a rougher time than she did , unlike some team members who were like bulls at a gate .
9 But there are so many C64 soccer sims to choose from you 'd have an easier job selecting winning Spurs team !
10 Another possibility that we can not categorically rule out is that an accelerating wind would have a higher column density than the constant velocity winds modelled here .
11 It they had been right , matrilineal society would tend to have a lower level of technological development while patrilineal societies would have a higher level .
12 He said that portion returned to the river would have a higher concentration of nitrates but would be diluted very quickly .
13 By the end of the year he was predicting , in research carried out for the Scottish National Party , that unemployment would have a worse impact in Scotland than elsewhere in the UK , reflecting the poorer social conditions prevalent there .
14 Similarly both the Rathenau Advisory Group in the Netherlands and the Industrial Institute of Economic and Social Research in Stockholm , carried out simulations which indicated that slow introduction of microelectronic technology would have a worse effect on employment than keeping up with other countries .
15 If tax-relief-induced donations did not go to pay for mainline social service functions and elected representatives still felt it necessary to continue to provide them , they would have a lower tax base on which to raise the revenue .
16 Now the unit would have its own crew 24 hours a day another factor which would mean Darlington would have a better service .
17 Perhaps our dear Lord would have a better chance .
18 ‘ Tell your client , ’ said the voice at the other end of the phone , ‘ that he or she would have a better chance of establishing who is or is not responsible for his or her dustbins if he or she employed a lawyer who did n't address his inquiries to people whose principal concern is pharmacology . ’
19 An experiment would have a better chance of persuading people that the publication of opinion polls affected individual views .
20 Susan knew that would n't work , but also that she would never be able to explain to Juliet why an amateur enforcer would have a better chance indream than a skilled public servant .
21 Furthermore , committees would have a better chance of identifying inefficient budget-output proposals .
22 Now Mr , in the light of what Mr has said , do you understand that if the structure plan key diagram was amended in that way , it will still yo leave you and your clients open to challenge , or you would have a better chance of challenging er the er preferred option of the County Councils at the next stage , which is either through the local plan channel or through the er the the planning application stage for the highway ?
23 He himself had gone to University College , Oxford , so he thought I should apply there , because I would have a greater chance of getting in .
24 The Task Force on ‘ the environmental dimension ’ of the internal market described itself as ‘ much concerned ’ with the transport sector , which it thought would have a greater impact on the environment than any other sector .
25 Broadly , the reason for this is that in smaller populations the selection of an extreme value for the sample would have a greater effect on the calculation of any value for that sample if the sample was also small as a ratio of the population .
26 If big shops tended to offer a wider range of credit facilities than small ones , then people shopping in the urban centres where big shops are round would have a wider choice of credit types than people shopping in small rural centres .
27 Boeing said the new plane , which is derived from the 767X project , would have a wider body than the existing 767 plane used by British airlines and new wings .
28 It was urged that , if this construction were adopted , a solicitor would have a shorter time during which he may abstain from bringing his action for work done than the rest of Her Majesty 's subjects .
29 He would have a further communication for her then .
30 In all these societies there are contradictory movements , either to limit or to expand the social services ; movements which take place in what are still substantially free market economies , but raise the question whether there can be any further development of the welfare state without restricting still more the operation of the market and eventually creating a more socialist type of economy in which public ownership of some major productive resources and financial institutions , and more extensive planning , would have a larger role .
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