Example sentences of "would [vb infin] to have [verb] [det] " in BNC.

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1 If we can trust the figures which suggest that Christians tended to marry at a notably higher age than their pagan contemporaries , Christianity would appear to have reinforced these shifts towards marriage as a more personal and free partnership of equals .
2 Justin , who would appear to have lost some of his old charisma , became the straight man of the act — always mending things .
3 The 1974 legislation would appear to have accomplished this objective .
4 Moreover , since the use of thrombolytic agents and aspirin in patients with myocardial infarction improves short and long term survival we would expect to have to give any additional treatment for a longer period to a larger number of patients to show a further reduction in mortality .
5 And , and I would expect to have completed that review by March .
6 The compensating disadvantage is that when conflict exists there will be more than one efficient solution , but at least we would expect to have excluded those non-preferred solutions which could never be optimal .
7 £ Well , I think I really had better stop there , and then if you want to ask any questions erm we can go into them , but perhaps I could just mention two things that I would like to have said more about , one was , that you probably know , there were three or two major epidemics in Oxford , of what they call plague , but it was probably a form of typhus , in 1643 and 44 , and a good deal of sickness , I think , still in 1645 , and the other was that there was a very serious fire , which almost certainly arose from these kind of living conditions , because Anthony Wood says it was a soldier roasting pig , erm and I think a lot of cooking went on in very unsuitable situations .
8 I take this to mean that price leadership or parallel pricing are not in themselves regarded as anti-competitive : the firms would have to have followed some specifically anti-competitive course of conduct , for example exclusive dealing or discriminatory discounting , to fall foul of the law .
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