Example sentences of "would [be] [verb] from a " in BNC.

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1 The sources said the operation would be run from a NATO air headquarters at Vicenza , in north-eastern Italy , and would probably include fighters from the United States , Britain and France .
2 If Lindberg was to come to Tromsø he would be hung from a lamp-post , probably by his balls .
3 Hard currency needed for travel would be obtained from a fund financed by both East and West Germany [ see p. 37109 for Dec. 5 agreement on this issue ] .
4 He further announced on Jan. 29 , 1990 , that 2,750 military and civilian personnel ( including their dependants ) would be withdrawn from a number of bases in the United Kingdom and elsewhere ( for other announcements of US defence expenditure cuts and for European concerns about reduced US miliary commitment to Europe see p. 37226 ) .
5 Further , British Rail , for example , would be distinguished from a Type B non-profit , even though it receives substantial capital and revenue grants from the Government .
6 A king would not be an hereditary monarch , but would be elected from a small cohort of princely and chiefly families , in the ancient Irish manner .
7 That 's how a wedge of flamed maple would be cut from a tree .
8 These 20 buyers would be chosen from a representative cross section of firms , according to the numbers in each level of output category .
9 The omission of the verb gives an immediacy which would be missing from a construction such as It is a virgin scene ( where the present tense is a direct attempt to make a coding time and content time the same ) .
10 However , it does explain why measurements of silicon and magnesium isotopes yield results which do not agree with what would be expected from a supernova explosion .
11 Examination of the aircraft revealed a quantity of metal swarf in the oil filter , the nature of which was consistent with that which would be expected from a bearing failure within the engine .
12 That is the verdict that would be expected from a Government department , but it is not the whole story .
13 In general , it seems sensible to suggest that any discretion will be exercised so as to improve regulators ' utility ( along the lines of what would be expected from a managerial utility maximization model like Williamson 's , 1963 ) .
14 The court would be unwilling or unable to determine what speed would be expected from a competent getaway driver .
15 Moving this way , then , we would be starting from a causal theory of justification ; the causal theory of knowledge would simply be one of its consequences .
16 As my French was better than Brian 's , we agreed that I would do the talking and that I 'd choose a moment when Mazzin was in one of his camarade moods so that neither of us would be starting from a point of anger .
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