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

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1 She kept wishing her mother would have a sister for her , but Jean Keith was in no great hurry to oblige .
2 But alike in the British and the American traditions the expectation that the poet would have a message was so ingrained that even by those readers most alert to and informed about Eliot 's French connections The Waste Land was still thought to deliver an urgent signal — usually about the bankruptcy of the European , or the Western , cultural and civic traditions .
3 Such a ‘ note ’ would have a frequency of about 400 GHz and a corresponding wavelength of 0.7 mm , that is to say it is a microwave of about the same order of size as the ones used in microwave ovens Now the law relating to microwave transmission is very strict , and microwave ovens are suitably shielded to prevent the unwanted escape of potentially lethal radiation .
4 And they would have a king again in sympathy with them .
5 Although Mr Flowerdew used to come down occasionally and see him : sometimes they would have a row and sometimes they were quite friendly .
6 The shadow cabinet therefore took its decision in the clear knowledge that it would have a fight on its hands , but it did so with the support of Lansdowne and Law .
7 The DM50m ( £1 =DM.2.86 ) facility would have a capacity of 10,000 t pa and could start operation in the third quarter of 1994 .
8 CNG is pressurised to 200 bar ; a typical storage cylinder would have a capacity of approximately 50 litres .
9 Data that , then , cost nothing if obtained through government channels would have a price if sold through the medium of free enterprise — a peculiar state of affairs .
10 Surely such a rumour would have a price ?
11 In it the poor would have a voice and a share , but would not be able to outweigh or vote away the interests of the propertied and the wealthy .
12 Probably not many in this neighbourhood or , for that matter , in any other would have a Union Jack on their clothes line .
13 Ebullient , and with a broad grin , Williams early sensed his own powers — at sixteen he told a friend that he would have a fellowship of the University of Wales , an 1851 exhibition , a D.Sc. , and an FRS by his middle thirties .
14 All such agreements would have a US guarantee and such supervision as necessary .
15 One can not have a single quark on its own because it would have a color ( red , green , or blue ) .
16 In other words , the Home Secretary would have a discretion to exercise from case to case , with the result that the duration of each warrant would vary , subject to a statutory maximum period .
17 But I wanted , if possible , to put something into the dialogue that would have a bearing on my dispute with Armstrong about his account of bodily sensations .
18 An information leak , for example , would have a bearing on the extent to which others who possess the information have already been buying or selling .
19 That paragraph refers to high quality of environment and agricultural land quality as factors which would have a bearing on the distribution of er erm employment land , and I just want to er assure the panel that I do n't think any of the allocations that we 've made er on the strength of the erm er consultations that we 've entered into would cause problems er for either qual high quality environment or high quality agricultural land .
20 Semenov promised me that he would have a word at the highest level , with Yury Vladimirovich Andropov .
21 ‘ Look here , Squire , ’ said Desmond , ‘ we were wondering if you would have a word with Potter . ’
22 I would have a word with Anne jus , just from
23 I thought I would have a go at senior rugby for a season , then pack it in .
24 We could n't sport the name of Dark or Phillips or Brown or Davies or any other Worcester paddler who went out to give their all but we thought we would have a go .
25 I would have a go . "
26 And erm She was determined that she would have a go her own , the following week .
27 I thought that I would have a go at getting a pilot 's course , which I did — and was soon sharply put in my place .
28 ‘ Bernie Slaven , who was sat next to me , thought Rippers would have a go when he started his run .
29 A doctor would have a defence of therapeutic privilege , if disclosure would have posed a serious threat of psychological detriment to the patient .
30 We 'd go in and maybe Elvis would have a couple of tunes he 'd want to try , or maybe Sam would have some ideas , so we 'd try different things and finally just lock into one of them . ’
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