Example sentences of "would have [to-vb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It would mean that we 'd have to continue this charade in the future . ’ |
2 | So then they 'd have to call another van . |
3 | If she could buy some make-up after the X-ray expedition the discolouration would be hardly noticeable — only she 'd have to borrow some money from Penry , she realised , frowning . |
4 | I think we 'd have to ignore that allowance |
5 | I was beginning to think I 'd have to drink this coffee . ’ |
6 | But I mean they actually do work , er ten percent gross yield and erm if you asked me to explain how they get the ten percent , I 'd have to use some notes they gave to me cos it 's , cos it 's complicated , but they use derivatives , and they buy in er in the shares and options market , and erm the company I 'm thinking of actually own the shares , but you take options on them , and they take commission on the options , they also take dividends , er and by the time you 've read the , the , the spiel , it sounds a bit like you 've fitted all these petrol savers to your car and you 're driving to Nottingham , and the tank overflows , it 's that sort of |
7 | The new operating systems have n't been recompiled for Intel 's Pentium — SCO says it 'd have to support two product lines otherwise — and sales on 80386 platforms still make up half its business . |
8 | When he 'd switched the plates he 'd have to give some thought to ways of raising a little cash to live on . |
9 | I 'm afraid I 'd have to rewire this guitar in a more commonsense manner , so the toggle switch points towards the set of controls in use ( that 's the key , I think ) , and also so that the volumes sit fore and the tones aft , the way Gibsons and Fenders do . |
10 | remember that just a few weeks ago that you were de , almost denying that we 'd have to do this sort of thing ! |
11 | She 'd have to lose some weight , of course , and then maybe buy some new sexy underwear … |
12 | If I 'd become known as the Man In The Pyjamas , I 'd have to wear those pyjamas for the rest of my life ! |
13 | And you 're your graph paper few metres long , or you 'd have to cramp this scale up quite a bit bring it closer together . |
14 | That 's all I 'd have to eat all day . |
15 | Basically , PC Tools has it all ; you 'd have to buy several Norton packages ( as well as Norton Utilities ) to amass this impressive horde . |
16 | And er there was a stage when we came to the , where we really decided we 'd have to earmark different streets , how far we were gon na go in the centre of the town , because people were beginning to get grants for altering houses , and then in another five years time the council , the council were having to buy back these houses to redevelop the area . |
17 | The next day the letter came and it said we 'd have to find another doctor for my dad |
18 | I 'd have to find some way of talking to her alone . |
19 | I knew she 'd have to find some way of getting over him but I did n't expect anything as drastic as this . ’ |
20 | But she 'd have to find some way of squaring the situation . |
21 | She 'd have to find some way to forcefully evict him from her thoughts , and the only way to do that was to fill her mind with something completely different — like the party she was planning . |
22 | ‘ You 'd have to have some experience with explosives — surely ? ’ |
23 | And I left Rhos-y-Bol when I retired because I felt I they 'd have to have another nurse there , and you see the other nurse would never be able to enjoy the They would always be running to me a and it would n't be fair to another nurse . |
24 | Well I mo moved because promotion was in the line for me , I was in the Royal Marine Police in island depot in Plymouth and er I 'd been put on plain clothes work and I 'd been doing acting sergeant you know when the sergeant was off sick and all that business and er I 'd put , been put in for this to move because we had a two bedroom bungalow but the twins were getting big and I realized that we 'd have to have another bedroom you know , very soon and er , this seemed an opportunity to get a house and also in Plymouth , that Plymouth was a naval town , you see , there was still those days there was still kind of a , a lower deck of sons , what they call lower deckers , in other words you know people in the lower deck of the navy , their sons did n't really have much , ever have much chance of getting into places like Dartmouth College or Cramwell to do as cadets , well the headmaster at Regent Street School had said to me that Keith was very keen on flying , he was aeroplane mad you see , and , he wanted to go in the Royal Air Force , well he said to me he said oh no put him in the Navy and as a chief art as an artificer , so I said oh no , I said if he goes in the Navy or the service I want him to go in the front door not like me the back door , I had ambition for him |
25 | She said what she said I 'd have to stay all night and all day . |
26 | You 'd have to sign some sort of form . |
27 | I mean , if you , if you into , if you were trying to look into building or commercial and you had to send them a planning application for it , you 'd have to prove that building could support the weight . |
28 | If it were consistent the government would have to view these variations too as evidence of inefficiency . |
29 | By 7th March 1940 , the Chief Ordnance Officer estimated that once Donnington was operational , the railway would have to carry 1,450 rail wagons ( 7,250 tons ) inward and 2.050 ( 10,250 tons ) outward each month ( an average 5 tons per wagon ) . |
30 | He would have to stop some time , and then she would be able to escape . |