Example sentences of "would have an [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And you 'd have an awful lot of explaining to do ever after . ’
2 I think , I think she will probably have an aw she 's a very bright girl , I 'm sure she 'd have an awful lot to contribute .
3 I thought he 'd have an apoplectic fit . ’
4 Then I just felt so tired I thought I 'd have an early night .
5 ‘ As a matter of fact , I thought I 'd have an early night . ’
6 But there are so many C64 soccer sims to choose from you 'd have an easier job selecting winning Spurs team !
7 I thought there might be somewhere where they 'd have an old circular saw you know , probably got a bit more chance with help , but they do a bit of rough cutting do you know what I mean ?
8 This is equivalent in terms of the effect on the total physical capital stock to reducing b by , and we can see from ( 8–56 ) that such a reduction would have an equivalent effect on the government budget constraint .
9 Otherwise , successful inventors would have an entrenched entry barrier which would prevent competition from other firms or new entrants for all time .
10 When the erstwhile All Blacks ' captain , Wayne Shelford , was asked on Saturday evening if the appointment of Gavin Hastings , assuming it transpired , was to be seen as a victory for the Celtic fringe , he answered simply that it would have an awful lot more to do with his having some decidedly impressive credentials .
11 New employment laws regarding dismissal , redundancy and sick leave would be introduced , and the church would have an increased role in education .
12 ( Otherwise , by the theorem , LP ( w 1 , … , w p ) would have an optimal solution for some set of positive weights and , therefore , the dual problem is feasible for these weights . )
13 And if it were unpredictable , then while it would have an immediate effect on output , this could not be prevented by government policy since the government would not be able to foresee the fall in aggregate demand .
14 The Council believes it would be very very difficult to assimilate a lan erm a new settlement into this area successfully and that a new settlement in this a area would have an urbanizing impact far beyond the confines of the er immediate area .
15 Now my my conclusion from that , and I think is a conclusion which has been supported by the public on con during the consultation exercise on the Greater York study , was that peripheral development around Greater York would have an undue impact on the historic character of the city , and that of course is the fundamental , the protection of which is of course a fundamental aim of planning around Greater York .
16 . So really what I 'm saying is that it h would have an undue impact on highway network and in particular on that particular erm strand of it .
17 In its simplest concept a site would have an optimum width of , say , 70 metres , comprising a 6-metre road , two 2-metre footpaths and plot on either side of 30 metres .
18 The chances are that any LSE owner would have an appropriate button fitted as soon as possible , so if Lowden themselves fitted them , making sure the job was done elegantly , that would keep the guitar original and prevent any screw-ups by those amateur guitar repairers who 've never heard of pilot-holes …
19 At the beginning , all the paths would have an estimated cost of .
20 It would have an estimated speed of 190mph and a range of 600 miles , plus a retractable undercarriage , variable pitch airscrews and landing flaps .
21 Thus , they tabled proposals for a Bill of Rights , an Assembly where they ( the Unionists ) considered the SDLP would have an effective role and an Inter-Irish Relations Committee — avoiding the unmentionable Council of Ireland — representing a formal link between the Belfast assembly and the Dublin parliament .
22 Rail service providers would have an automatic right of access anywhere in the EC so that , for example , a UK-German rail link could not be prevented from using Dutch or Belgian tracks .
23 In so far as the plaintiffs are seeking to recover from the third defendant money which he has obtained for his own benefit or for the benefit of companies which are , in effect , his alter ego , I can see that the third party would have an overwhelming argument that it can not be just and equitable to require him to contribute to whatever the third defendant is ordered to pay to the plaintiffs .
24 In a short , unexpected speech the King announced that the central commission would be chaired by a judge and would have an Interior Ministry representative and representatives chosen by each of the eight political parties represented in the Chamber of Representatives .
25 ‘ I ca n't think anyone would have an adverse word to say about him , he was always so polite , considerate and caring to others , ’ Mr Ivory said .
26 Where a defendant was charged with committing an act of gross indecency with a co-defendant who had pleaded guilty to a charge of gross indecency with the appellant , evidence of the co-defendant 's plea of guilty , although relevant , should have been excluded from the jury , since such evidence would have an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings against the defendant as the jury was likely to treat it as going to prove the defendant 's guilt .
27 If we believed it would have an adverse effect on claims , we would discourage people from buying timber-frame .
28 As someone interested in trying to promote industrial regeneration and further growth in the north-east does my hon. Friend agree that the additional burdens laid on businesses in regions such as his own by the absurd idea of the imposition of a regional tier of government and the increased taxation necessary to pay for that tier would have an adverse effect on local business , would increase costs , would reduce competitiveness and would help to drive business and jobs away from his region ?
29 Teesdale district councillors yesterday rejected plans for a house and double garage within the grounds of Etherley Lodge , near Bishop Auckland , because it was felt they would have an adverse effect on appearance and character of the the Lodge .
30 The objectors object on the grounds that the village of Skelton should be washed-over by the greenbelt , that the site should be identified as greenbelt , and therefore it should be excluded from the built inset , and that the development of the site would have an adverse impact on the surrounding area .
  Next page