Example sentences of "[Wh pn] would [verb] on " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Everyone started laughing and I was concerned that ‘ Jacki ’ might feel alienated but he immediately started laughing himself and I knew I 'd signed a character who 'd get on fine in Scotland . ’
2 Who 'd live on a street called Failure ? ’
3 Did n't Cloughie get done for doing something similar a few years ago when he chinned the Forest fan who 'd run on the pitch ( later kissed him but brought out one of the all-time commentators classics from Greavesie when he said ‘ It was the first time the shit really had hit the fan ’ ) .
4 There goes a woman who would dance on her enemy 's grave , he thought , curious and thoughtful .
5 One of the many adverse criticisms of Albert Ferrasse and Jacques Fouroux is that , for involved reasons of French rugby politics , they have ostracised the Toulouse club together with such players as Denis Charvet and Eric Bonneval , who would walk on merit into any northern hemisphere XV .
6 The lawyers acting for the parents tried to present themselves as friends , representatives who would speak on behalf of the parents .
7 But in order to do this , it is necessary to have the backing of a majority of the shareholders who would vote on the issue ( not necessarily a majority of the shareholders ) .
8 There might be another house foreman want a man who would stand on the house and and they want a checker , so I 'd go all these men for these different ships , that was my job , being chief foreman stevedore .
9 On that night the spirits of mischief were supposedly abroad , characterised by small boys who would knock on doors and run away .
10 The threat from outside the surveying profession by those who would compete on the same ground can be countered by active marketing of the surveyor 's services .
11 From now on popes would be surrounded by men who would comment on their every dictum .
12 Most who would fail on this count have already been weeded out in preliminary interviews with the party vice-chairman and local area officials , but it can still stop a potential career in its tracks .
13 Mswati did not specify who would decide on the incorporation of the Vusela-2 recommendations into a new constitution , neither did he give a new date for elections , which had been due in November , although he said on Oct. 26 that they would be held in the first half of 1993 .
14 She was also the person who would decide on the success or failure of Doug 's probationary period .
15 Or he could face a knottier , and probably impossible , problem — how to woo the 20-plus Liberal Democrats who are likely to be returned and who would insist on electoral reform and Scottish devolution as pre-conditions for their support .
16 Those who would insist on an agreed blueprint of morality , or a set of moral values , to which all our aims and actions must be subject , would not accept that there are moral dilemmas .
17 By the time of the Crécy campaign in 1346 men-at-arms and mounted archers , who would fight on foot in positions chosen , as far as possible , for their defensive possibilities , were being recruited in broadly the same numbers .
18 There are some who would object on philosophical grounds to this kind of synthesizing approach .
19 If it is required to register this release at HM Land Registry ( and that depends on the practice by the mortgagee ) the original ( plus copy ) should be sent ( together with fee of £40 ) to HM Land Registry who would note on the Charges Register that the charge had been varied .
20 However I run my boat as a charter boat and cater for a masochistic fringe who would sail on Christmas day if I were to let them .
21 He knew only too well what would happen ; no doubt his stepfather would have the daily help to come in and take care of him , but as far as the business was concerned , it would likely be whipped from under him by the many land sharks who would prey on the defenceless old man without the slightest compunction .
22 The way would thus be opened for the real attack , by 60,000 men landed simultaneously at Rye , Winchelsea , Hastings and Pevensey , who would march on London .
23 And as a child his own household included not only his father 's father but his mother 's grandmother , who spent most of her days hidden away ‘ in her own cabin ’ , but who would emerge on Sundays , always knitting a long stocking .
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