Example sentences of "would have a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | With such a light loading the Vision 11 would have a sparkling performance in a broad range of wind speeds ; but its inverted vee form is a bit of a paradox after all we have stated in favour of the twist in a swept wing ! |
2 | A child who had been taught to pray to a Mother in Heaven would have a religious life radically different from that of a Christian child . |
3 | The money we put into oil exploration , if we were lucky , would find us a new field , which would have a limited life only . |
4 | The Senate would have a limited veto over bills passed by an expanded 317-member House of Commons . |
5 | The Senate would have a limited veto over bills passed by an expanded 317-member House of Commons . |
6 | The full prediction equation is therefore : Chronic sickness = 9.83 + ( 1.66 × Death rate ) We would predict , for instance , that East Anglia , with a standardized death rate of 108.2 , would have a chronic sickness rate of 9.83 + ( 1.66 × 108.2 ) or 189.4 . |
7 | It is posited here that rational childbearing practices , including patterns as to age of mother at birth of child , the amount of time that elapses between births and the total number of births , would have a salutary effect upon the health and well being of the family and its individual members , particularly mothers and young children . |
8 | Some years ago we lent to a colleague a memory-training book with a very attractive title , which implied that after studying the book the reader would have a superb memory for all occasions . |
9 | The health authority would have a legitimate interest in the decision in the light of its current responsibility towards J. and towards other patients for whose care its necessarily limited resources have to be used . |
10 | This would have a stabilising effect on the emerging democracies in Eastern Europe . |
11 | It can be predicted from the low binding specificity of the 140k DNA binding domain , that the intact 140k protein would have a low promoter selectivity ; 140k could perhaps function by activating sub-optimally utilized RNA polymerase II promoters in a similar manner to that previously suggested for the homologous PRV IE180 protein ( 38 ) . |
12 | Mehta believed that the Afghan regime and the USSR would have a strong incentive to accept the group in Kabul . |
13 | But it would have a strong impact on imports . |
14 | The Stockholm Open would have a strong claim , but so too would Tokyo , not least for the enormous amount of Japanese funding there is these days for tennis . |
15 | He added the presence of a nursing home would have a long-term effect both on the future development of existing firms in the area and those wishing to locate on land earmarked specifically for industrial purposes . |
16 | It was assumed that shareholders would have a long-term commitment to their company and that if there was a problem , it would be the directors rather than the shareholders who would change . |
17 | Once Columbus had found his new continent , and the discovery was common knowledge , anyone else mounting an expedition westward would have a rough idea what he would find . |
18 | The only certain starting point was that the opera would have a Swiss theme , in common with Cheltenham 's International Music Festival , of which the project was part.That aside , they made up the script as they went along . |
19 | Second , the NHS would focus more on acute hospital care ; thus chronically sick patients , who lack media appeal and who have never been able to compete successfully for resources within the NHS , would have a substantial part of their budgets protected within the proposed community care grant . |
20 | She was afraid she would have a defective child because she had seen in Angharad what could happen in her husband 's family . |
21 | Should it become easier to acquire companies in the Community by a decrease in barriers to takeovers , UK companies would have a comparative advantage , as UK companies enjoy a relatively accessible source of equity finance through the large amount of stockmarket capitalisation . |
22 | Some regions and countries would have a comparative advantage , either because they were sparsely populated or because they cared less about the smell of a rubbish dump than their more pernickety neighbours did . |
23 | The world would remain unshaken over this but maybe the constable would have a gentle word with the unthinking reverser . |
24 | Owners of companies nationalized in 1946-62 which had become part of larger companies would have a prior right to subscribe for shares . |
25 | Sir Antony , in a letter to Senator John Warner , who is the leading Republican on the Senate armed services committee , said that ‘ any withholding of productive funding … would have a knock-on effect which could delay the arrival of the first missiles for the Royal Navy , and continue to impose time and cost penalties on the British Trident programme ’ . |
26 | It would have a , it would have a knock-on effect . |
27 | Precisely what this means is not clear because presumably even in a socialist state it would have a necessary function in maintaining law and order . |
28 | Many of the genes in a family might have to be converted to a new variant before any significant change in the phenotype occurs-but by that time all individuals would have a similar proportion of the new variant and so would be physically very similar . |
29 | He knows that we can not reduce the VAT rate as a solution , but he also knows that we can take measures that would have a similar effect in helping the industry . |
30 | Patrick would have a roving brief out on the golf course . |