Example sentences of "would [be] [vb pp] [art] " in BNC.

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1 So in that first year , at ten percent , you 'd be given a capital allowance of five hundred pounds , to be set against a profit of four hundred pounds .
2 And the theory was that if you served thirty years in the Ce Central African police , you 'd be given a section of land in what later became Rhodesia .
3 If she 'd been on 4AD , she 'd be given the same amount of attention as the Muses , Pixies or Breeders .
4 It would be very carefully calculated and they 'd be given the right amount of the proteins that they could use to grow , because in the first years of life there 's very rapid growth and development is n't there ?
5 And the moment he mentioned his stepmother she 'd be given the opportunity to tell him how very unhappy Bertha had become .
6 Paragraph three , the action plan , er well it will guide itself evidence this , the statements made under the action plan , from section three of the report will guide our activities over the next three years and of course paragraph four performance the critical success factors , by the seven criteria we will be judged in the highway service and each one is a challenge in its own right and I do hope to receive in order to carry out these er , these er promises in fact , that erm , I 'd be given the relevant level of financial staff and resources
7 Cos I was talking to Lilian , she was thinking that each year she 'd be given an update it should be a five year plan .
8 ‘ You said you 'd be gone a week , perhaps longer . ’
9 No that that would be they 'd be expected Every person would have I imagine they would al well everybody had a white sheet just for this .
10 ‘ The trouble is , the music industry today is so sad and pathetic that if Bob Dylan started a career today , he 'd be deemed a Woodie Guthrie wannabe , instead of them saying what amazing songs he 's written .
11 The DHAC announced that the exercise would be repeated the following weekend ; although the police warned that they would have to intervene this time , the demonstration went ahead and was extended to forty-eight hours .
12 Now I 've had two of those rest days prior to all this so I would be owed a fortnight 's holiday pay plus three rest days .
13 Floella is a visitor and would be owed the common duty of care .
14 The code proposed the creation of a two-tier administrative system to allow for the easier processing of non-controversial mergers and takeovers , the referring of important or unusual cases to a full Takeovers Committee ( which would be renamed the Takeover and Mergers Panel ) , the right of appeal to a new independent Takeovers Appeal Panel , and the retention of 5 per cent as the maximum amount of shares which a person controlling between 35 and 50 per cent of shares in a company could further purchase in any 12-month period .
15 The EFTA countries , the richest countries in Europe as a group , would be granted a privileged relationship in return for a full share in the burden of supporting the economic development of Eastern and Southern Europe .
16 Between 1337 and 1353 the tax on wool formed part of a series of schemes under which the king attempted to establish a body of powerful and wealthy merchants who would be granted a monopoly in the purchase and export of wool in return for making loans to the king which would be repaid from the maltote , the export tax on wool .
17 On the other hand , they would have been inspired by the promise that they , as loyal adherents of the Messiah , would be granted a unique recompense for their fidelity and for any suffering they had incurred .
18 Moreover he persuaded his father to agree that if the terms imposed on the rebels last summer were not acceptable to them now — as obviously they were not — then they would be granted a fresh hearing in the King 's court .
19 Now , on the chaise to Banff , Boswell planned with Johnson that they would regenerate the University of St Andrews according to the abilities or conceits of the Club members , each of whom would be granted a Faculty or two .
20 Under the terms of the agreement ( reached in principle in May — see pp. 38221-22 ) , the 17,000 Inuit in the region ( who constituted some 80 per cent of the area 's total population ) would be granted the right to hunt , fish and trap within Nunavut .
21 It seemed as good a way of ingratiating myself as any other : the palace was a protective place , and there was no automatic guarantee that a visiting journalist would be granted an audience .
22 Such components have a value of zero : all other components have positive values , for example , section num would be assigned the value 6 in the heading of the sixth section of an act .
23 A lawyer speaking for the families said they would be appealing against the Place of Safety orders , and that the appeal would be heard the following day in Kirkwall Sheriff Court .
24 He said Labour would be denied the opportunity to re-erect the interventionist policies promised in the policy review .
25 Under the scheme , which could become a draft directive by the end of the year , motorists would be denied the choice of purchasing parts from the largely cheaper independent suppliers .
26 Labour 's suspicions were immediately aroused that Asquith 's speech at the National Liberal Club was part of an ‘ Establishment ’ plot to deny Labour fair play , and that a Labour government defeated in the Commons would be denied the right which other governments had enjoyed , of an immediate dissolution .
27 Shareholders in the group would be denied the financial rewards of the painful , but necessary restructuring , he warned .
28 Around her neck would be placed a bib of gold which reached to her waist .
29 Thus it might be that the old English case of Woodhouse v Brotherhood 1972 ] ICR 186 would be decided the same way under the Directive , because the facts , as found in that case , were that the transferee employer used the factory and the machines to produce different products from those made by the transferor and sold them in different markets .
30 While most of the cases which were decided under the heading of gross negligence would be decided the same way under reckless manslaughter , from cases such as Lamb , above , manslaughter by gross negligence may survive despite Lord Roskill 's statement in Kong Cheuk Kwan v R that the term was not to be used .
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