Example sentences of "[vb -s] [conj] [pers pn] would [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 He says that it would make an ideal site for tourist related businesses .
2 The Institute says that it would prefer the former .
3 The national executive 's consultation paper further warns that it would leave the party looking divided every time the two houses failed to agree .
4 Obviously , one can not accept anything that Philby says since he would have a vested interest in causing mischief amongst the British security services , but it is interesting that he did volunteer the suggestion that MI6 was involved .
5 A Trades Union Congress study published today shows that it would cost the Government significantly more to implement its pit closure programme than it would to keep the mines open .
6 International relief efforts were hindered by the regime 's pro-Iraqi stand on the Gulf crisis , its initial refusal to recognise the gravity of the famine , and fears that it would obstruct the distribution of food , especially to non-Moslem regions in the south where the war with the SPLA was at its height .
7 ‘ It seems that you would need a vessel such as that in which you came , before you would be able to return to your own world .
8 Well my Lord as a time saver it would quite er how my er learned friend went through the documents , i it in the contents she would otherwise make and one suspects that it would take a great deal longer .
9 The massive oil slick in the northern Gulf , caused in large part by Iraq 's action in deliberately releasing oil into the sea [ see ED no. 43 ] , continued to cause concern during February , although earlier reports that it would have a devastating effect on marine ecology appeared to be exaggerated .
10 However , there is an equally wide body of opinion , expressed mainly by manufacturing industries , which oppose such a move because it believes that it would disrupt the long period of uninterrupted production between the August holiday and the Christmas break .
11 If the guardian believes that it would assist the court to see all or any of the records or documents he has inspected he must notify the court ( FPCR , r11(9) ( b ) ; FPR , r4.11(9) ( b ) ) .
12 A recent study by the Centre for International Economics in Canberra suggests that it would cost the EC $52 billion a year .
13 Asking what is the capacity for such an expansion , in practical terms , we must conclude that the available evidence suggests that it would require a transformation that would be nothing short of miraculous .
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