Example sentences of "and [adj] [noun] would " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In such cases the similar treatment of human subnormals and lower animals would be far removed from ‘ the very same act ’ .
2 Grants and parental contributions would be frozen at 1990 levels and loans would eventually form half of a student 's maintenance award .
3 It prevents proceedings being transferred for this reason unless it can be shown that no other method , including transfer to another magistrates ' court , is appropriate and that delay would seriously prejudice the child 's interests .
4 Now , of course , nobody denies that certain processes ( blood flow , neural transmission etcetera ) occur in the brain and that behaviour would be impossible without them .
5 Of course , this does not mean the specialist skills of the district nurse or the health visitor , or indeed any community nurse , would become obsolete , and that specialisation would become a thing of the past in community nursing .
6 Wilson also announced that a new Hong Kong Technology Centre was being planned as part of the overall strategy to boost the economy , that an International Business Committee would be set up as a means of tapping the talents of overseas businesspeople for the benefit of the whole community , and that £1,600,000 would be spent to bring pollution under control .
7 During the debate on the exchange rate mechanism , we were told that entry of the ERM would exert discipline and that inflation would come down as a result .
8 The government predicted that the current-account deficit would fall from A$20,700 million in 1989-90 to A$18,000 million in 1990-91 and that inflation would fall from an annual rate of 7.7 per cent to 6 per cent .
9 The government predicted that the deficit would shrink from 17,000 million pesos in 1990 to 1,400 million in 1991 , and that inflation would fall from its current rate of 12.2 per cent to 9.5 per cent by the end of the year .
10 Opponents of free banking argue that a lender of last resort ( i.e. a central bank ) is needed , and that inflation would be rampant under free banking because of the banks ' ability to print notes at will .
11 And he would then go round picking up his mates and say er you know I need a holder-on , I need a rivet boy , etcetera until such time as he got a squad together , and that squad would start in the morning as a squad .
12 As a result of the consultancy report , it was decided that seven of RBIS 's ten local offices would be closed — with no compulsory redundancies — and that RBIS would operate out of a head office in Manchester while RBIC would operate from three regional offices in Glasgow , London and Manchester , with its head office located in Glasgow .
13 On 11 September the German Standortkommandantur , which had been set up in the Piazza Garibaldi to administer the city of Parma , issued a series of orders , one of which stated that it was forbidden for civilians to have guns and that looting would be punishable by death .
14 Critics argued that it was merely an attempt by Ford to purchase market share in the UK and that rationalisation would inevitably cause massive job losses .
15 And that headdress would get caught up in the overhead wires , you silly boy .
16 The majority go on to point out that if the law were to punish ‘ rape between cohabiting spouses … immediate imprisonment might not be appropriate ’ and that imprisonment would be most unlikely where no injury was sustained by the wife .
17 Right , the , I was , about to er come to that , erm the erm , there is no reason why a group should not have more than one prisoner erm , the practical situation is that , that groups are queuing up to , to get a prisoner at the moment in fact , erm , not always the situation but at presently there is a waiting list for who have groups to have a prisoner allocated to them , erm , if we so wish er , ah , if , if a group comes onto the list who has er , ah , and their prisoner is released and , and we , we er in that situation we , and any group without a prisoner at all goes to the head of the list and be allocated straight away , but we could request a second prisoner and that case would be put to the bottom of the list , so when the other groups who , who 've got no prison will take priority now , but we , we could request a second prisoner if we so wanted so you are talking about a motion at the A G M , but it 's not really necessary
18 The original regulations of the College stated that candidates for entry must not be under 15 nor over 22 years of age , and that preference would be given to those youths who had received the elements of a good education .
19 Unidroit , for example , goes to considerable trouble , by means of consultations with representative international organizations and by questionnaires to specialists and to governments which in turn consult their national organizations , to establish that those practising in the field in question believe that differences in national laws create a problem and that harmonization would bring benefits .
20 Lieutenant-General Wolfgang Schwanitz , the head of the Stasi political police and secret service , renamed the Office for National Security , warned that attacks on his organisation could no longer be tolerated , and that order would be restored if necessary .
21 The correct sentence would have been nine months ' detention in a young offender institution , and that sentence would be substituted .
22 Cresson told UK Prime Minister John Major during a visit to London on Sept. 24 that compensation would be paid to British farmers whose lamb consignments had been attacked in France , and that protection would be provided for British and Irish lorries .
23 Erm and that nomination would subsequently lapse should you marry or erm on the death , marriage or remarriage of the person that you actually nominated .
24 On the darker side , there was the fear that ignorance would rule and that deference would fail to hold things in check .
25 Speaking to The Art Newspaper Sylvia Thomas , the YAS archivist , explained that almost half the one hundred parchment rolls ( each roll comprising up to thirty parchments ) had now been treated and that work would probably continue for another four to five years .
26 It was necessary to buy records , and that factor would have put it beyond our reach .
27 She said that adoption should be postponed and that custodianship would be sufficient .
28 In the present case the mother said that D was secure with the foster parents and that custodianship would be enough .
29 While lacking the legal authority to transform CODESA 's decisions into law , the government effectively undertook to use its large majority in Parliament to endorse CODESA resolutions , although State President F. W. de Klerk made it clear that CODESA would not automatically have law-making powers and that Parliament would have a veto .
30 Campbell and Duval arranged that Campbell would prepare a document giving Turnbull & Co. security over Mrs. Duval 's property and that Duval would get his wife to sign it .
  Next page