Example sentences of "would [verb] [art] long [noun] " in BNC.

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1 An irritated Dutch official said : ‘ If the Danes can do it with a referendum by July , I do not see why the British would need a longer time . ’
2 ‘ I thought you would enjoy a longer ride on such a lovely night .
3 For sports the children would run around a local playing field , which was just down the road , they walked there under supervision of , or the children would do the long jump in the sand pit .
4 One year unemployment action plus one year adult training would achieve the long term objective for those unemployed , with special needs .
5 This would continue until about 11 pm , when they would begin the long drive home .
6 Time and time again we would begin the long task of explaining who John was and what on earth we were doing .
7 However , there is an equally wide body of opinion , expressed mainly by manufacturing industries , which oppose such a move because it believes that it would disrupt the long period of uninterrupted production between the August holiday and the Christmas break .
8 To get the tyres out of the oven two of us would have a long rod each .
9 The rule applies in all preconsonantal environments including those that would have a long vowel in monosyllables ( fricative and voiced obstruent environments and liquids ) , except apparently before [ s ] clusters ( as in hospital ) .
10 The government 's manifesto commitment was to increase benefit in line with prices but this does not guarantee its future after the next election , and presumably any proposals on child benefit would have a long lead-in time .
11 Perhaps that was why he had embarked , without capital , on trying to put up a building , though god knows this would have no long life in Manhattan .
12 The second alternative would take a long time to achieve .
13 Then he would move to another par of the bed , away from the cold wet patch that would take a long time to dry and leave a stiff yellow stain on the mattress .
14 Most of these solutions would take a long time to implement .
15 The difficulty here is that this would take a long time to carry out , besides which , there is the problem of access .
16 Once food has cooled to 5°C or colder , if any food poisoning bacteria are present most will grow only very slowly and it would take a long time for them to reach large enough numbers to cause a problem .
17 The English host was able to cross unhindered , although it would take a long time to do so in its entirety .
18 Given the long times required to charge the larger rods , you can see that after getting a first qualitative result with the smallest rods within a few weeks , a proper quantitative analysis to test the variation with rod diameter and current , and so establish the nature of the effect would take a long time .
19 Starving the defenders out seemed to be the only course , and that would take a long time .
20 She helped me as much as she could , but I knew it would take a long time to reach Estella 's level .
21 This form of socialism , based upon the accountability of the state to society rather than vice versa , would take a long time to develop , but it was this form of socialism that supporters of perestroika hoped the Party Conference would develop further — as indeed it did .
22 However , he stressed that economic growth was still heavily dependent on continued flows of external assistance , since the programmes under way would take a long time to carry out .
23 It would take a long time to get our grill out because I do n't think it would move any more .
24 The Eradicator may well be the solution ; tests conducted by Ray have certainly proved encouraging , and it would take a long string of coincidences to attain the results he has achieved by any other means .
25 She would take the long route back over the desolate flats .
26 At a stroke , this would neutralize the long experience of rural discontent between tenants and landlords , it would remove the over-bearing power of landlords in village communities and in the process eliminate one source of support for the ultra-nationalist movement .
27 It would mean a longer walk for them round the northward coil of the river , but that was a small matter once they were out of the town .
28 Changes in the parole system were promised so that serious offenders would serve a longer proportion of their time in jail .
29 I thought for a moment he was gathering his coat tails around him , like a woman would gather a long skirt , but it was n't that at all .
30 He would walk a long distance out to some pub , often the Malcolm Arms at Anton 's Gowt , and have lunch in the bar on beer and bread and cheese .
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