Example sentences of "would have the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Will my right hon. Friend add a new dimension to the debate by commenting on whether any studies have been carried out on how the TA could provide relief in the event of natural disasters , which would have the agreeable effect of combining military efficiency with humanitarian benefits ? |
2 | Two more years and , in company with Walcott , he would have the first-class record outright , putting on an unbeaten 574 for the fourth wicket in Port-of-Spain , his contribution this time being 255 . |
3 | I told her she might' get a chance , though of course I would have the ultimate control . |
4 | Finally , it is therefore the more difficult to see how the proposals can have anything to do with genuine industrial democracy , that is to say , with the accountability of the board of directors as a corporate whole to the individual men and women who constitute the workforce and who would have the ultimate power to replace an unsatisfactory board . |
5 | Does he agree that any Department which adopted such a policy would have the grateful thanks of a vast number of women ? |
6 | He also expressed the opinion , obiter , that the court would have the like power if the transfer were merely voidable , as opposed to void . |
7 | I suggest that the proposed scheme would have the following advantages : |
8 | An issue of Dollar Preference Shares would have the following advantages for LASMO : |
9 | Gemmill and Dickens argue that such tests examine both the validity of the model and the efficiency of the TOM and that they would have the following implications : |
10 | Baldwin at once began to talk about the walk they would have the following morning , and suggested that they should eschew the subject of coal for the evening . |
11 | This Upper House would then be set in conflict with the House of Commons ; and the Lower House , although largely unreformed and unrepresentative , would have the deciding vote . |
12 | Zacco , as King of all Cyprus , would have the Venetian fleet on his side . |
13 | First , the Secretary of State told the Committee and the House that the new form of community care , which will be run by local authorities , would have the extraordinary advantage that people in the locality who knew the scene would make the decisions . |
14 | If the two-tier board structure were used , then the management board would have the sole power of day-to-day management . |
15 | Under the new regulation , which was to become effective in October 1990 , the Commissioner would have the sole authority to examine , and if necessary to veto , any merger where the joint world-wide turnover of the merging companies already exceeded 5,000 million ECU per annum , of which 250,000,000 ECU from each company came from the EC , which threshold being revised every four years . |
16 | This ignores the saving on refuse disposal ( which would have the effective price ) and the fact that one method reduces landfill pollution , while the other generates a type we do not yet know how to clear up . |
17 | Hanna showed that it was mathematically possible for such vortices to form under the right surface , wind and stability conditions and that such vortices would have the right sort of diameter , about 2 or 3 km ( I-2 miles ) , to explain the spacing of the dunes . |
18 | He and Chris Grant , on The Thinker , jumped the last together , but it was always on the cards that McCourt would have the upper hand . |
19 | Similarly , the announcement on 8 March 1962 of the composition of the National Directorate of the ORI , which revealed that the Communist old guard would have the upper hand , was countered three weeks later by the denunciation of Anibal Escalante for ’ sectarianism' , a measure which forced the Soviet Union to take a stand . |
20 | Even if it landed on time , I would have the four-hour journey to Hull and it was unlikely that I would make it to the funeral . |
21 | His antics and those of his wife would have the environmental health officer round at the drop of a hat . |
22 | Soon he would have the Imperial standard in his hand . |
23 | At other times she would have the odd sensation that they were shouting at her , through a megaphone , from a rowing-boat that was pulling swiftly away towards a distant ship . |
24 | If the duty were held to be unexcludable , this would have the odd effect that a trespasser to premises not in business use could be better off than a visitor . |
25 | Her daughter would be perpetually in her debt , perpetually chained to her , and she would have the new stimulus of another baby to bring up . |
26 | The Minister of Law and Order Hernus Kriel announced on Nov. 8 the formation of a new police unit which would have the specific task of stabilizing and controlling political unrest . |
27 | It would be a man , of course ; only a man would have the sheer effrontery to do that . |
28 | Letters were then drawn up to be enrolled at the Court of Chancery so we would have the necessary licence to trade . |
29 | Such a conference , it was argued , would have the necessary authority to force Israel into conceding a " land for peace " formula . |
30 | This would mean that a ten-year old child in this category would have the mental abilities of a two-year old . |