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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 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 .
2 They would have to disclose commercial property holdings , share holdings , gifts received above a value of NZ$500 , and outside income .
3 ‘ Adequate resources would have to include extra staff , as this shortage contributes a great deal to our lack of staff training , i.e. the staff we have are all needed to run the service ’ …
4 A union would have to issue written warnings to all those members it had learned were threatening an unofficial stoppage telling them that they risked dismissal without compensation if the strike continued .
5 We would have to import skilled workers from abroad .
6 Already he was beginning to steal glances at the clock , comparing it needlessly with his own watch , missing bits of the film while he made rapid calculations as to whether he might conceivably be able to see Bridget home , and , when this had become out of the question , as to how long they would have to say good night at the hated corner .
7 Cairns Boston , head of the company 's management team at Land 's End , explained : ‘ We have reached the point where , without these new measures , we would have to give serious consideration to banning climbing altogether at Land 's End . ’
8 In Britain similarly parties would have to give careful attention to the locality factor .
9 With regret Stirling realized that he would have to abandon offensive action that night and decided to withdraw without placing any bombs , so as not to jeopardize a future visit .
10 A spokesman for Fife Health Board said it would have to take legal advice before any question of an appeal was considered .
11 Assessment in Catholic Religious Education would have to take great care against falling into the trap of only aiming to develop that which readily lends itself to measurement .
12 Because Brutus was such an idealistic character he felt that he would have to take important steps towards saving Rome from the evil grasp of Caesar .
13 It would have to spend large amounts of public money to save face .
14 They would have to put private money into public transport projects .
15 He reasoned that perhaps he would have to put fresh sensation between these echoes and their origins ; fuck them out ; sweat himself clean .
16 Or I would have to do miserable work like illustrating , or even commercial stuff , to keep the home going .
17 To do so you would have to keep careful pedigree records of caddises bred in captivity , and breeding them is difficult .
18 In the large county constituencies , where some people would have to travel large distances to exercise the right to vote , transport was often laid on to help known supporters get to the poll .
19 Any new operation setting up in the architecturally acclaimed building would have to satisfy strict planning constraints , however .
20 Of course that would have to mean Open Software Foundation founders Hewlett-Packard Co , Digital Equipment Corp and IBM Corp taking part .
21 Of course that would have to mean Open Software Foundation founders Hewlett-Packard Co , Digital Equipment Corp and IBM Corp taking part .
22 Parliament would have unlimited access to the funds , but would have to pass specific resolutions to appropriate money .
23 But under contracting regulations , companies would have to match current pay and conditions and may be deterred from taking on Westminster employees .
24 The tsar improved the Ministry of Finances ' chances of introducing economies by ordering that state agencies would have to prepare detailed estimates of their future expenditure .
25 According to the Treaty , non-signatories would have to pay hard currency for their imports from the new Soviet Union .
26 We estimate that for the United Kingdom , in 1991-92 , some 230,000 non-pensioners with gross incomes below £10,000 a year would have to pay national insurance contributions on their income from savings .
27 We estimate that a further 1,750,000 people would have to pay national insurance contributions if the directive were adopted .
28 Will my hon. Friend confirm that the directive on part-time working would mean that 1.75 million part-time workers , and their employers , would have to pay national insurance contributions ?
29 For the producers of material X , for example , although not currently selling X to exporting firms , can argue that , if they were not supplying firms that sell only on the home market , those firms would have to buy imported supplies of X , and that , if the firms that now supply X to exporting firms were unable to do so , they would be able to take their place .
30 He looked like a nome who would have to learn new words before he could describe things .
  Next page