Example sentences of "[pron] would be [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | I mean you can get units sort of er I 'd be in inner London for that price . |
2 | I thought of how I 'd be in full control if I was alone . |
3 | I 'd be in quick Oh |
4 | We were on our way to the river to photograph the landscape which , Lady Rutherford told us indignantly , would be ruined for ever if Mr Knightley allowed Mr Dinsdale and his industrialist friends to dig a quarry , part of which would be on common land . |
5 | The Ulster representatives feel that Manchester is capable of staging a games of ‘ unparalleled quality ’ which would be of lasting benefit to world sport . |
6 | The Ulster representatives feel that Manchester is capable of staging a games of ‘ unparalleled quality ’ which would be of lasting benefit to world sport . |
7 | Moynihan and his growing body of supporters ridiculed this proposal , and many commentators felt that the administration would find it very difficult to reject Moynihan 's demand for an immediate social security tax cut ( which would benefit all citizens ) whilst pursuing a reduction in capital gains tax which would be of chief benefit to those who were already among the most wealthy . |
8 | Can your precious ethnography tell us anything which would be of practical use about managing these queues ? |
9 | It is known that the RUC has accumulated considerable evidence which would be of great interest to an impartial inquiry . |
10 | A population increase of about 3.5 million was forecast in the South-east in the period 1961–81 , just over 1 million of which would be from net inward migration , the remainder in the form of natural increase . |
11 | Given the stance of policy approved Policy I eleven in relation to B eight development and the fact that we are here discussing an alteration not a review and replacement of the structure plan , does anyone around the table she said looking hard at Mr Saunders , see any difficulty in the panel poten potentially recommending a policy which would be in direct wi conflict with the policy which is not before it ? |
12 | By the time you get all the crew up on the windward rail , which would be in true wind of 10 – 12 knots , you should be flattening the bottom of the main and opening up the leech . |
13 | Now she 'd be in extra trouble for losing the sandal . |
14 | If she did n't get some decent sleep soon , she 'd be in severe danger of cracking up completely under the strain . |
15 | So you 'd be on automatic choke for a bit of the way , most of the way anyway so |
16 | I do n't blame you — though if I thought you was messing around with her , anything like that , you 'd be in dead trouble , believe you me . ’ |
17 | She was calm , authoritative , in the way she would be with injured animals . |
18 | If I marched round there and demanded my wallet in front of Dennis , she would be in deep doo-doo . |
19 | In the seventh month of pregnancy , Alison Walker needed to be reassured that in the event of her baby 's premature arrival , she would be in good hands . |
20 | I think they needed normal people who would be in complete control of themselves , who would n't get carried away by any sadistic impulses . ’ |
21 | This is bound to be somewhat artificial , since the obligation to show all the stages of your reasoning forces you to appear rather more introspective than you would be in real life , but it still provides good practice in arranging and presenting material in an acceptable style . |
22 | The Home Guard became a joke for some and a remark once passed in my company was " What use do you think you would be against trained troops ? " . |
23 | If we knew that , I think we 'd be beyond reasonable doubt . |
24 | She belongs to me ; this is no longer her home ; but we would be on friendly terms with you if — ’ |
25 | Impressed as we may be by the caddis house , we are nevertheless , paradoxically , less impressed than we would be by equivalent achievements in animals closer to ourselves . |
26 | And the idea here was that one would be for incoming goods , and one would be for empty wagons or the other way round , er going out . |
27 | And the idea here was that one would be for incoming goods , and one would be for empty wagons or the other way round , er going out . |
28 | There was no assembly but there would be on other days for my group . |
29 | Instead he had to contend with the usual difficulty of those with rights in personam : if the trustee was insolvent , they would be worth little . |
30 | Pension schemes are vital to many of our constituents , and I should have thought that they would be of equal importance to Conservative Members in Scotland , who may soon have to look to their own pension schemes although the Minister has reassured me that he may have other arrangements . |