Example sentences of "it would [vb infin] [adv] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 John Gummer , Minister of Agriculture , told the conference it would bring together existing strands of work and report directly to David Maclean , the junior minister responsible for food .
2 Readability Plus entered the shareware arena after a successful period as standard commercial software , but publishers Scandinavian PC Systems thought it would reach more potential users from the shareware catalogues .
3 It would make very significant incursions into our much against our wishes , to accommodate that , so that we would be looking to North Yorkshire to and work to the same levels of migration , the trend in migration as it were .
4 For some staff it would guarantee jobs for life , and it would mean more flexible shop floor working as well as the end to clocking on .
5 This Minotaur was imprisoned in a labyrinth beneath the Palace of Knossus and , as it would eat only human flesh , each year seven handsome youths and seven beautiful maidens were sent in to the monster 's lair to meet their doom .
6 It is typical of the Labour party 's attitude that it would fritter away additional resources by spending more money not on increasing the number of training places but on paying more to those already in training places .
7 But members turned the application down as they felt it would cause more late-night trouble .
8 It would discuss specifically religious views on the purpose of life and attitudes to death .
9 If this image were displayed using the methods described earlier it would lack very dark values ( 0–24 ) as well as medium to bright values ( 91–255 ) and would cover only the dark to medium grey range .
10 It would indicate more middle people , for one thing .
11 It would offend both common sense and justice to hold that the very control which enables such people to extract the company 's assets constitutes a defence to a charge of theft from the company .
12 The next time she admired the Algarve 's famous springtime extravaganza , it would have warmly romantic connotations .
13 The Clow Committee had recognised there would be practical problems : the quarterly cycle of meter reading would make it difficult to concentrate the higher charge on the crucial months of December , January and February when demand was highest ; in really cold weather or if coal remained in short supply it would have only limited deterrent effect ; and off-peak demand might be adversely affected .
14 Had this been the case , it would have greatly relieved pressure on the remand population in prisons .
15 It would take very good reasons for us to change our minds .
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