Example sentences of "would have [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He added that Mr Major would have warned the Queen that she risked being dragged into a political storm .
2 With a normal take-off the glider would have cleared the obstruction .
3 The ace of clubs would have defeated the contract out of hand but East mysteriously returned a diamond .
4 In its original form , it would have involved a cost to the British taxpayer , to the Government and to employers of up to £500 million .
5 The judge said , the men 's defence would have involved a re-examination of the events of nineteen seventy four .
6 Some such process may have been originally responsible for the separation of England and France by the formation of the Straits of Dover , although this would have involved the breaching of a much broader barrier than the Purbeck-Isle of Wight ridge .
7 Is not it clear that a party which , a few years ago , was offering to do a deal with the Soviet leadership that would have involved the sacrifice of 100 per cent .
8 The former was never seriously in the running , for it would have involved the demolition of the caretaker 's house and garage , removed the First Forms ' playground and provided no new classrooms : indeed , if built , it would have rendered the 1937 extension itself too dark for further use .
9 It would have involved the country 's first overseas military deployment since 1945 , and was opposed by the domestic opposition and by several of Japan 's Asian neighbours .
10 The official report states : ‘ To have forced his way into Benghazi when the enemy was obviously ready for him would have achieved nothing and would have involved the loss of his force . ’
11 ‘ You cow , ’ cried Sam , without malice : only a few months ago she would have pressed the plum into her friend 's hair , but now she threw it on to the pavement where it lay easily among the cabbage stalks and traces of vomit .
12 Either of them would have grabbed the hand .
13 This erm approach would have enabled the council to obtain some capital receipts under the terms of the chancellor 's Autumn statement .
14 She did not know how long she would have to carry the child , or when it would be born ; she had no one to ask except Mrs Seager , who was still insistent that they go soon .
15 More than that , it would have constituted a breach of rules of respect for elders , a denial of social hierarchy inculcated throughout infancy , boyhood , schooldays .
16 The detractors say they are relative newcomers who would have constituted a gamble .
17 Politeness and kindness would have constituted a refusal .
18 In the following years , he would have undertaken a vision quest similar to that described by the Nez Perce warrior Yellow Wolf :
19 He was n't obliged to follow his own scenario any more , but he knew he would have to obey the voice now .
20 Probably Tolkien would have accepted the thesis ( not unfamiliar to medievalists ) that all great works of fiction should contain a kernel scene or a ‘ lyric core ’ : to use the terminology of Marie de France , whose ‘ Breton lays ’ Tolkien imitated in ‘ Aotrou and Itroun ’ , 1945 , every conte or story comes from a lai or song .
21 She would have accepted the situation as it was .
22 Lily supposed the tartans to be fictitious : no self-respecting Scot would have accepted the commission if real clans were to be insulted .
23 If Carson had been predictably agreeable and obviously interested she would have accepted the lift and that , apart perhaps from the promise of a follow-up lunch some time , would have been the end of it .
24 She had hoped that Rosie Lane at least , who was usually willing to try anything once , would have accepted the challenge , but she demurred , pleading a headache , and Janice told her , in mysterious tones , as though provided with obscene , private information , that she would be mad to go to such a place , that it was rough there , and wicked beyond all Clara 's pitiful conceptions of wickedness , and that if she went there anything might happen to her .
25 He would have applied a multiplier of 12 .
26 If the will had been there and secure accommodation and prison accommodation had been available , I suggest that magistrates would have applied the law in the way that was intended when that legislation was passed .
27 Defending solicitor Mr. Blundell asked the magistrates to consider whether Mr. Thurgood would have played the part of peacemaker and then gone out and attacked the soldiers ' car .
28 An incurable optimist , she was sure that they would find some way of making their living , but she knew that her sister was afraid they would n't — and in that case , of course , they would have to let the cottage , and separate after all .
29 If anyone had challenged Frederica directly as to whether she believed that , she would have argued the toss .
30 Those preferring to have them collected , or to take or send them individually , were mostly older people , and people in lower socio-economic groups , and people who — when they were talking about being so short of money that they would have to arrange a loan — thought in terms of a relatively small amount of money .
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