Example sentences of "that would [vb infin] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 : the computer has no knowledge of the cultural norms that would identify the fridge as being a likely repository for food .
2 I would welcome anything that would improve the legislation .
3 It was the indictments of the Audit Commission that led the Secretary of State for Social Services to ask Sir Roy Griffiths ‘ to review the way in which public funds are used to support community care policy and to advise … on the options for action that would improve the use of these funds as a contribution to more effective community care ’ .
4 The Nadd Al Sheba course came about when the Sheikh asked Trutch to devise a scheme that would improve the appearance of the desert wastes inside the city 's popular racetrack .
5 The research was supported by WACC and carried out by the Centre for Artistic and Cultural Research ( ceneca ) with the aim of encouraging TV networks to carry programmes that would improve the quality of young people 's lives and thereby enhance their contribution to national life .
6 However , it is unclear to me at this time what recommendations one could put in the form of legislation to be put before the House that would command the majority needed to make sensible legislation , to allow the country to move forward in the 1990s .
7 And another resident was in favour of any proposal that would slow the traffic down .
8 Indeed , socialism was expected to release the dynamic qualities of the British people that would create the wealth needed to sustain standards of living and world power .
9 The High Elf sorcerers chanted the spell that would create the vortex .
10 It was safe from air attack and shielded by the Karochooq mountain mass from satellite photography that would tell the story of the purpose for which this rock cave was fashioned .
11 It 's only if there 's a sort of niggling problem that would tell the coordinator about and they would pass it to the police officers .
12 This will be appreciated by the candidate and prevent any unnecessary bad feeling that would affect the outcome .
13 Though this would not satisfy purists , the only factor that would invalidate the productivity index for this purpose would be if some companies had widely different subcontract proportions in their outputs ; these would have apparently higher figures than the others .
14 In making such judgements , the Home Secretary would call on expert advice from licence sponsors and referees , the Home Office inspectorate and a properly-balanced advisory committee that would oversee the code .
15 Ian Oswald and Phil Telford then detailed the review of branch procedures that would involve the development of Formlink , enhancement of the LAN system and an appropriate reduction in unnecessary clerical tasks .
16 The idea was to create a spatial framework that would carry the sightline of viewers towards a central focus .
17 It would be difficult to build water-gathering reservoirs of the size of those found in other Parts of the Pennines in the Dales because of the many eaves and potholes that would carry the water away .
18 And it would be a picture of his true warm humanity that would bring the money in for the project .
19 The Rev Fred Nile , of the Uniting Church , leader of the religious-based Call to Australia Party , is against amendments planned by the State Government that would outlaw the vilification of homosexuals .
20 But two powerful senators , Robert Dole and Howard Metzenbaum , scotched the idea , saying it was a special interest tax break that would cost the Treasury $64 million over four years .
21 It would have even more credibility if the Labour party was not pledged to introduce a minimum wage that would cost the health service £500 million .
22 The Conservative Conference : Easy lie the locks that would bear the crown
23 He found the panel that would open the way to escape .
24 perhaps even more importantly , the Commonwealth representatives agreed on four ‘ freedoms ’ of the air that would form the basis of an international settlement : the right of innocent passage over sovereign territory ; the right to land for non-traffic purposes ( i.e. refuelling , repairs , and emergencies ) ; the right to land passengers , mail , and freight from the airline 's country of origin ; and the right to pick up passengers , mail , and freight for passage to the airline 's country of origin .
25 It was here that the dogs came into their own , casting about for any tell-tale scent that would betray the presence of a hidden bomb .
26 It became clear that neither country could win a victory that would compel the other to surrender .
27 I hold no specific brief for the Baxter scheme , but it has attempted to demonstrate that alternative schemes could be produced that would retain the Government 's proposal for a terminus — an interchange — at King 's Cross , but states that the plan would be more satisfactory if it were achieved without creating an enormous hole in the ground which British Rail proposes , with all the consequent destruction of homes , jobs and local neighbourhood .
28 There was noticeable interest in moving towards greater cooperation with/utilization of ‘ outside ’ agencies , to produce tailor-made training that would satisfy the library 's own training objectives more effectively :
29 At the Huntsman 's Inn in Ide , Kent , the refurbishment proposals were to involve demolitions so extensive that all but a portion of the building 's external wall would be destroyed , the planned reconstruction included an extension that would double the size of the original structure .
30 The above considerations suggest that the gains in resource allocation efficiency that would ensure the replacement of EC member countries ' currencies with a single European currency exceed those which could be expected to follow the " irrevocable " fixing of intra-EC exchange rates .
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