Example sentences of "would [vb infin] [det] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Any reduction in income which resulted , would affect both the viability of the DSO contract and the Regional Council 's share of income .
2 And yet in 1953 another keenly awaited publication lit a fuse which eventually would explode many an illusion of carefully tended domestic bliss .
3 It is nowadays quite unrealistic for a tenant even to attempt to secure a long letting of commercial property at a fixed rack rent ; and no well-advised landlord would grant such a lease .
4 I 've seen that girl ride straight at an obstacle would make many a man blanch . ’
5 Chamberlain provided the way out by suggesting to Balcarres that both he and Long should withdraw and so allow Law to be elected unanimously ; he also turned down Balcarres 's remarkable advice that he should allow Long to be elected since Long would make such a mess of things that Chamberlain would be bound to succeed within the year .
6 The question is whether the Treaty of Maastricht would make such a transfer of allegiance imperative .
7 At first he refused to answer , then realised that no assassin would make such a noise so went down to the door and called out : ‘ Who 's there ? ’
8 It was the task of the Uthwatt Committee , from whose report this quotation is taken , to devise a scheme which would make such a basis possible . ’
9 The question that the hon. Gentleman has to answer is what nostrums put forward by his Front-Bench spokesmen would make such a record possible under a Labour Government .
10 No analyst would make such a claim today , and the ‘ nationalization ’ thesis has had to be revised in the light of increased local variations in voting behaviour .
11 USL president Roel Pieper says the technology that would make such a move possible is not yet formalised , indicating that it will be either the Open Software Foundation 's Architecture Neutral Distribution Format or a binary conversion .
12 When asked why they would make such a move , most replied that
13 The impossibility of shaking them in cross-examination would make such a reform grossly unfair to the media .
14 But Labour 's early hopes that its leader 's superior campaigning skills would make all the difference evaporated in the realisation that electioneering had become a form of trench warfare .
15 IF England could hold their own against Pakistan , it would not only be a great achievement , but one which would make all the difference to their chances of regaining the Ashes from Australia in 1993 .
16 It would make all the difference .
17 A well set out manual with step-by-step diagrams , even cartoon pictures , would make all the difference , because the Multiverb has so much to offer the guitarist in terms of both quantity and quality .
18 It was the time when her mother took to the couch because she could n't stand the sight and sound of the hordes of women and children with their buckets , and the arranged fights among the urchins so that one or two of their gang could get away with some lumps of coal , which would make all the difference between having a fried meal or freezing both inside and out .
19 If we 'd nut spoken to each other for years and he died it would make all the difference to have someone say he was still fond of me .
20 He was used to heavier controls than this , but an hour 's practice would make all the difference .
21 The original PSSRU schemes used shadow budgets for the case management teams ( up to the value of two thirds of the cost of residential care ) , but also gave them an allocation of money with which to purchase those services which were not readily available and which , although small , would make all the difference to keeping the client at home .
22 ‘ That would make all the difference .
23 The old hens would eat all the feed .
24 He has a wood shavings bed in his stable , otherwise he would eat all the straw , and he frequently has to go on diets , which make him grumpy .
25 A sum like this , though , would eat such a hole in it as to jeopardize his ordinary work .
26 Malcolm Colley would consider this a failure .
27 It 's well-written , informative , full of on-the-spot reports and case studies from all over the world — though somewhat eclectic politically ( however , many would consider this a point in its favour ) .
28 The Japanese , on the other hand , would need all the money they could lay their hands on to rebuild .
29 ‘ I am not going to get into what kind of therapy she might find herself in , but clearly she would need all the help she could get from whatever source was available .
30 They would need all the help they could get from beach surveys and marker canoes , so 50 Combined Operations Assault Pilotage Parties ( COPPs ) were proposed .
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