Example sentences of "would have [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 But here 's a toast to all those who played a part in this fall of a climbing journalist : my climbing friends , the helicopter rescue team , the doctors and nurses and our superb National Health Service ( coming from Ebbw Vale I knew one day I 'd have cause to be thankful to Aneurin Bevan ) .
2 Ancient laws governed who would have rights to watering holes , but the young herders were often caught in the breach , stealing camels and sometimes women , from neighbouring clans .
3 I remember when I was a child that occasionally my parents would have visitors to the house , people that I 'd never set
4 As an alternative to imprisonment , the courts would have discretion to sentence offenders , with their consent , to between forty and 240 hours of community service work .
5 At his peak Playschool would have claims to being the best chaser in the country .
6 At his peak Playschool would have claims to being the best chaser in the country .
7 No doubt if such a condition were not written into the Act , the trial judge and the House of Lords would have regard to the significance of the adoption of the procedure for litigants and to their wishes in exercising their respective discretions to grant a certificate or leave to appeal .
8 Whatever their basis in nefarious dealings , misunderstood intelligence , or dreams , noble things were being attempted , and if they came off the world would have cause to be grateful .
9 [ Ch 14 ] It is with a more elaborate example of this type of fanciful similitude that the impersonal " Dickens " introduces Mrs Rouncewell : She is a fine old lady , handsome , stately , wonderfully neat , and has such a back , and such a stomacher that if her stays should turn out when she dies to have been a broad old-fashioned family fire-grate , nobody who knows her would have cause to be surprised .
10 But even an angel would have trouble to better people 's lives and calm the rivalry between the peoples of the south ( where Mr Soglo comes from ) and the Muslims of the dry north ( Mr Kérékou 's people ) .
11 that 's half way to Tesco 's and they would have time to be there
12 Although this was true for some respondents , most policemen and women in Easton periodically sought reassurance from the researcher about the purpose of the research , what was being written down about them , who would have access to the material , what the researchers ' politics , religion , allegiances , and so on were .
13 He would have access to the great library , and some touch with the academics , and yet his pastoral instinct , and his work as a confessor , would have outlet .
14 For a rent of £6 per month farmers would have access to programmes on feed rations/chemical control of diseases/fertiliser rates , etc .
15 The benefits of a merger to GM would be to gain access to Leyland Vehicles ' recently introduced product range , whereas Leyland Vehicles would have access to GM 's financial muscle and foreign dealer network .
16 Keynote speaker Andy Grove , CEO of Intel , announced that by the end of this year , every PC user would have access to software based video compression and decompression .
17 In addition to dispensing , community pharmacists could offer the same range of services as their hospital counterparts : they could screen and recommend new products to prescribers , analyse prescribing patterns , and ensure safe and appropriate drug therapy since they would have access to patients ' notes .
18 Potential buyers would have access to the book which , it is suggested , would provide them with more meaningful information when they are ‘ shopping around ’ for a home .
19 Debut-ing Producer Verity Lambert would have access to a pool of new and established Directors physically to make the shows , plus , in the office next door , her most valued asset of all — a resident Script-Editor .
20 The satellite would be launched by a Russian Proton rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan , in return for which scientists from the Russian Space Research Institute ( IKI ) would have access to the data .
21 However , the parties would have access to a specialized competition policy tribunal ( a restructured MMC ) , if they were unhappy with the conclusions of the Office of Fair Trading , and further rights of appeal to the High Court on points of law , on the interpretation of evidence , and on the level of fines .
22 It would be prepared to " flip " name-words and it would have access to useful cross-reference files derived from the forms of names and titles which people actually search for .
23 Only a member of the Santerre household would have access to such a ladder .
24 Under the terms of the agreement the Jamaican government would have access to credits worth SDR 109,100,000 ( US$153,000,000 ) until December 1995 .
25 Obviously , in the initial stages not all activists would have access to terminals , but most will .
26 The Clinton administration has said that under its health reform plan all Americans would have access to a basic health care package that would provide all the services most private plans offer today .
27 Prison sources say that while many warders work at Crumlin Road , only a few would have access to the keys for the second B wing landing which were smuggled out .
28 Well erm if I 'm crystal ball gazing , I would hope that all the women in this country , whatever their colour and whatever their class , would have access to first-class provision for their young children , so that if they wished to work they could actually work in jobs that paid them enough and gave them job satisfaction .
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