Example sentences of "[noun] [Wh det] he would have [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He did not think that Ramsey would be interested in the load of administration which he would have to carry .
2 He had never thought of trying to foster an attachment which he would have considered quite improper .
3 If the plaintiff has been unable to work at all up to the date of the trial , his loss will be the entire net remuneration which he would have earned ; if for a period he has been able to earn something , but not as much as he would have earned had he not been injured , his loss for that period will be the net difference between what he has earned and what he would otherwise have earned .
4 Thus , the purpose of a rent review clause is not to revalue the original bargain between the parties , but to give the landlord the income which he would have got , on the terms on which he would have let , if he had had the property in hand on the rent review date .
5 Er , the only authority that was given was the authority to arm the officers by Mr which he would have put in to writing , er he was aware as to the method of entry to the of the flat but that no authority , no written authority was given for that .
6 ‘ We 'll be hearing this evening what he 'd have done if he 'd had his James Braid putter . ’
7 Now he walked with a sense of fatefulness which he would have mocked had it not been so inescapably serious .
8 He may have been prepared to accept from Anselm a call for restraint which he would have taken from no one else .
9 So insurance on the new Ford Fiesta car he had bought to drive his disabled wife about was going to cost him £750 double what he would have had to pay before the accident .
10 Obviously , Beatrice was enjoying taunting her editor and former lover with her constant references to another man which he would have understood .
11 Upon a sale of land the purchaser is normally entitled to have produced to him and to investigate the deeds recording previous transactions in the land going back for fifteen years ( Law of Property Act 1969 : formerly the period was thirty years ) ; and though this period is sometimes reduced by agreement , the shortening of the period throws a risk on the purchaser , who is not only bound by all legal interests in the land which actually exist whether he discovers them or not , but also by all equitable interests which he would have discovered if he had insisted on an investigation for the longer period .
12 Allowance will be made for the early payment of a lump sum to the employer which he would have earned over a period of time .
13 One upper-class motherless boy moved to live with a great-uncle who ‘ treated me with the same affection which he would have given to a son .
  Next page