Example sentences of "[pers pn] 'd have [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I never thought I 'd have back problems ! |
2 | I 'd have cheese , you can have cold lamb love , I 'm not keen on cold lamb Ricky will have pork chop |
3 | I think Fancher thought I 'd have dope sent to the Voice . |
4 | Yes , absolutely , because I said I 'd have Jake back about six at home |
5 | I think I 'd call it a day long before I found myself turning part of my humble dwelling into the bridge of the Starship Enterprise , but one thing is certain : I 'd have Julian Colbeck 's video series close at hand before boldly going forth ! |
6 | She said if I were you I 'd have breakfast , she said if you had something like porridge , you 'd feel more full and you could perhaps do away with your mid morning four rounds of cheese on toast , she said , perhaps , what d' ya want ? |
7 | I 'd have potatoes and cabbage and gravy . |
8 | I 'd have lions to guard me ! |
9 | If I 'd have Jan with Ben and we thought it was a new girlfriend . |
10 | I do n't want really want Darren , I do n't honestly think , I think I 'd have difficulty in the initial breaking , but then everything else would go |
11 | But the following weekend , I 'd have shopping fever again . |
12 | If I was n't a hat designer I 'm sure I 'd have loads of hats anyway . ’ |
13 | I 'd have tuna fish , I 'd have ham , everything because you can eat as much meat you could sit down and eat cabbage , swedes , runner beans , cauliflower , peas every vegetable |
14 | I used what mind control I could muster to blot out the thought of what lay ahead — at least I 'd have food to eat — after the gauntlet was run . |
15 | ‘ From the moment they told me that you were a breech baby I knew I 'd have trouble with you . ’ |
16 | I 'd have trouble betting on Leeds at 20/1 , let alone 9/1 . |
17 | I 'd have tuna fish , I 'd have ham , everything because you can eat as much meat you could sit down and eat cabbage , swedes , runner beans , cauliflower , peas every vegetable |
18 | If I had my way , I 'd have Axminster straight through the house . |
19 | ‘ At which point I 'd have hysterics and writhe on the ground ? ’ |
20 | But here 's a toast to all those who played a part in this fall of a climbing journalist : my climbing friends , the helicopter rescue team , the doctors and nurses and our superb National Health Service ( coming from Ebbw Vale I knew one day I 'd have cause to be thankful to Aneurin Bevan ) . |
21 | In their shoes , I 'd have doubts about your involvement . ’ |
22 | With any luck I 'd have time to dry my hair and dive back into the satin whatsits before he arrived . |
23 | I should n't be so busy organizing things , I 'd have time to do some nursing if I wanted to . ’ |
24 | She nodded in delight , everything forgotten other than the fact that she 'd have help with her bags and a companion to talk to . |
25 | Modelling at Adorno 's would be steady work ; it would pay well and , even after the agency took its cut , she 'd have money left over . |
26 | She 'd have things in trays on their table — cakes and bread and ginger biscuits and cough candy — but it was really queer because when you went in you could n't smell any of the lovely things laid out on the table . |
27 | ‘ Why on earth did she marry him , ’ she demanded fretfully , ‘ knowing she 'd have Angharad to contend with ? |
28 | Tomorrow she really must settle down to serious work on her novel ; time was slipping past , her deadline was approaching and if she did n't get on with it she 'd have Joe making agitated phone calls and coming down to visit . |
29 | If she did n't , she 'd have babies annually from puberty until death by childbirth around the age of thirty or so . |
30 | You 'd have mountains on each side of you and there 'd only be one way to go . ’ |