Example sentences of "[conj] he would [adv] have [to-vb] " in BNC.
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1 | Even his great friend and business partner in the Second Dominion , Hebbert Nuits-St-Georges , called Peccable by those who knew him well , a merchant who had made substantial profit from the superstitious and the woebegone in the Second Dominion , regularly remarked that the order of Yzordderrex was less stable by the day , and he would soon take his family out of the city , indeed out of the Dominion entirely , and find a new home where he would not have to smell burning bodies when he opened his windows in the morning . |
2 | But as he walked , he became more and more convinced that he would also have to tell him about Surere . |
3 | His officials were talking about " the man who came to dinner " and making it clear that he would just have to go before the Islamic summit that was scheduled to meet in Morocco in April . |
4 | It was better to stand out at the beginning than to go in with the expectation that he would soon have to provoke a further crisis by resignation . |
5 | Perhaps it was inevitable that he would eventually have to follow the likes of Gary Oldman across the Atlantic . |
6 | Behind Boswell 's published account of his fidgety stay at the Mackinnons ' — he felt so lethargic that he did not encourage Johnson to talk so that he would not have to write it down — lies some oddity . |
7 | He avoided going to the prize-giving so that he would n't have to meet her . |
8 | It was not a call that he would now have to make . |
9 | He had already been involved in taking prisoners to the mountains and told me that he would now have to think of a way to get Eric there too . |
10 | She hoped to God that he would never have to go back there again . |
11 | He agreed , on a strange condition : that he would never have to work with the eagles . |
12 | It was just a pity , he thought , that he 'd now have to sit tight here , while his men were facing the enemy . |
13 | This tightens his corner exit line and gives more room than he 'd otherwise have to unleash as much power as possible , as soon as possible . |
14 | He says he wanted to become a professional singer so he would n't have to do a job he did n't like . |
15 | in case me number one son comes round starving again , I 'll have a pan of stew for him to dip into , plus he left half inch in bottom so he would n't have to wash pan |
16 | He would n't be suffering now , and he would n't have to suffer more , oh , how much more , later , when I told him … |
17 | And he would just have to learn , and quickly , to be glad of it . |
18 | He can , of course , also make a payment into court , but the difficulties of calculating it are obvious and he would probably have to pay in more than the value of the claim for immediate damages to tempt the plaintiff . |
19 | To his dismay his weight problem was causing him to become increasingly short of breath and he would soon have to restrict his carnal pleasures . |
20 | And he 'd probably have to resign himself to that situation until he returned to Winchester . |
21 | He would n't need much he could sleep in the car-but he 'd still have to eat and buy fuel . |
22 | When he asked for an artificial leg for his newly amputated right leg he was told not only that he could n't have one , but he 'd also have to give up his existing left false leg , which he 'd had for six years . |
23 | She 'd be hurt , angry , filled with hatred … but he 'd only have to touch her to have her dizzy with excitement in his arms again . |
24 | The next morning , so it was reported from the White House lawn , President Bush was ‘ vexed ’ and ‘ frustrated ’ by the verdict , presumably because he would now have to evince symbolic ‘ concern ’ and make well-publicised calls on the attorney general to see if Rodney King 's civil rights had been abused . |
25 | However , once in the system it is difficult for him to move to higher-paid employment in another industry , for he would also have to find housing elsewhere for himself and his family . |