Example sentences of "[modal v] have no difficulty " in BNC.

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1 With the funding John Makepeace has attracted he should have no difficulty finding the students .
2 A broad-beamed fellow like myself should have no difficulty careering it across the ironing board , although a woman or even a bachelor-wimp might sooner resort to an old-fashioned metal iron than attempt to put this monster through its paces .
3 After that you should have no difficulty in reeling off the list , 1 — vacuum cleaner , 2 — pink blancmange and so on .
4 The contributors succeed , by and large , in avoiding technical obfuscation , and anyone who reads New Scientist should have no difficulty in absorbing the information here .
5 They argued that since the concentration of military forces in the hands of the League would be a step towards their total elimination , absolute pacifists should have no difficulty in supporting collective security as a step in the right direction .
6 ‘ I 'm sure if this misguided individual is in the habit of flying on these things , I should have no difficulty whatsoever . ’
7 Once this routine has been established in puppyhood you should have no difficulty with your pet when visitors call .
8 While Camping Gaz fuel is widely available and UK users should have no difficulty in finding a supply , if you intend heading to more remote parts , even of Europe , it 's another story .
9 A sharp eyed youngster should have no difficulty in spotting the loose change , that so often litter such areas .
10 So good that , providing you take it to the right places and use it expertly , you should have no difficulty in doubling your pocketmoney every week .
11 For example , unregulated private monopolists should have no difficulty earning profits .
12 They should have no difficulty in paying for those extra officers .
13 From this point of view , teachers should have no difficulty in finding suitable material .
14 If you 're a half-decent teacher , she should have no difficulty in passing . ’
15 You should have no difficulty guessing if you 're at all familiar with the zodiac . ’
16 The Gr10 is well signposted and waymarked , following tracks and country roads as well as paths , and reasonably fit walkers should have no difficulties .
17 So you 'll have no difficulty in spotting it — smoother , more substantial , but unmistakably Audi .
18 Er , let's remember that it is a study that is , to start us talking , and I 'm sure we 'll have no difficulty in finding some comments as we go through them .
19 But I 'm sure you 'd have no difficulty , Ruth . ’
20 In some cases we may have no difficulty in finding several groups , but in every case we shall find one ( or two ) .
21 ‘ He would have no difficulty finding another situation in Florence . ’
22 Nevertheless , there is an unquestioned assumption that the pupils selected would have no difficulty in following a grammar-school course .
23 I would have no difficulty whatever in going on any hustings and waxing eloquent about foul sewage coming up in the wrong places .
24 Registration as a fishing vessel was a form of establishment and although British citizens would have no difficulty in obtaining registration , EC nationals would have to change their nationality to register .
25 Miss Honey felt confident that she would have no difficulty in convincing Mr and Mrs Wormwood that Matilda was something very special indeed .
26 Finally , in lighter vein , modern scientists would have no difficulty in exposing the falsity of an entry in honest Kepler 's notebook , following observations through a Galilean , telescope , which reads , ‘ Mars is square and intensely coloured ’ .
27 ‘ I would have no difficulty over accepting as valid a will created in the following way .
28 James Saynor , writing in the Observer , set the tone : ‘ Jonathan Meades ’ first novel is long and purple — a condition for which the author would have no difficulty finding a simile .
29 The captive chimpanzee would have no difficulty with mating if its mating behaviour — like that of a great many mammals — were simply triggered by the sense of smell and by hormonal or pheromonal stimulation .
30 The question posed in er item two D , should the policy include specific guidance on the location of the new settlement , we would hope that in the light of what you 've heard , and in the light of the statement I 've just read out , that you would have no difficulty coming to a conclusion on that question , just as it stands .
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