Example sentences of "[prep] [det] [noun pl] would [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Multimedia databases for computer display containing thousands of such illustrations would therefore need hundreds of megabytes of storage for the images alone , leaving very little room for anything else . |
2 | But the vast majority of such sentences would either not fit into the story ( message ) meaningfully , or would alter the story to a greater or lesser degree . |
3 | The value of such systems would perhaps lie in their immediacy , for instance in assessing reaction to a television advertising campaign whilst it was actually being carried out . |
4 | Social interactions of such pupils would also be explored . |
5 | It is suggested that the first of these reasons would no longer be valid if litigated again ( see Multiservice Bookbinding Ltd v Marden [ 1979 ] Ch 84 , where Browne-Wilkinson J upheld a mortgage under which the interest payments were linked to the value of the Swiss franc , cited with apparent approval by Lord Denning MR in Staffordshire Area Health Authority v South Staffordshire Waterworks Co [ 1978 ] 3 All ER 769 ) . |
6 | For there would be some temporal duration represented by each revolution of the wheel and a certain number of these revolutions would still take place in the interval of time we call a day , even though the motion of the sun had ceased . |
7 | The installation of these systems would ideally be provided by the canopy manufacturer in order to ensure that the design integrity of both canopy and fire suppression are not compromised . |
8 | If , for example , the frequency distribution of corporate payout ratios happened to correspond exactly with the distribution of investor preferences for payout ratios , then the existence of these preferences would clearly lead ultimately to a situation whose implications were different , in no respect , from the perfect market case . |
9 | A discussion of these things would only make the atmosphere worse . ’ |
10 | Each of these headings would then have to be costed . |
11 | 21 We know you would never consider smuggling a wild orchid into your home country , but which of these considerations would most tempt you to break your resolve ? |
12 | None of these solutions would altogether solve the problem . |
13 | The dilemma , he adds , is that ‘ reinforcement of the parliamentary accountability of these organisations would also entail a strengthening of ministerial control over them ’ , so destroying the arm 's length relationship with all its attendant advantages . |
14 | We each absorb millions of pieces of new information as we progress through life ; think of the confusion if this information became jumbled up with facts learnt in any number of former lives — and many of these facts would now , of course , be out of date because of the technological progress made by man . |
15 | Without their purchasing them , many of these books would never have been published . ’ |
16 | As Cocking ( 1989 ) points out , many of these traits would ultimately be revealed in conventional plant breeding programmes but tissue culture provides a much more rapid means of assay . |
17 | What we 've come forward now is , through is a series of proposals , now these would apply to all , all of these , there was some concern at the meeting that we did n't of them , which appeared to have no , no chance at all as I told you , so all of these issues would actually apply to all of them , but the kind of things that are talked about , is trying to get a , a standard of systems throughout Shropshire so we need the importance of the way they , they sell a fruit shop within , within a , a rural are a rural village . |
18 | It would have required an enormously creative imagination to have foreseen the kinds of jobs that the children and grandchildren of those farmworkers would now be engaged in . |
19 | Yet in the past a lot of those customers would simply have accepted the way they were treated . |
20 | The biggest single contribution in the success of those efforts would probably be a major extension in the requirement for leave to appeal . |
21 | Likewise he appeared quiet and unassuming ; the quiet and unassuming character of both men would never lead anyone to suspect their rôle in the Sabbah network . |
22 | Fiveyear , renewable contracts for all ranks would still mean good officers being in the job for life but should also mean an end to lazy time-servers . |
23 | Since metastases of unknown origins are usually poorly differentiated the sensitivity of testing with these antibodies would also be reduced . |
24 | The EV under these conditions would therefore be |
25 | The EV under these conditions would therefore be The EV of perfect information in this case is the difference |
26 | It is suggested that the revenue from fiscal drag , which currently goes in financing the inflation-proofing of personal tax allowances , and which under these proposals would no longer exist , should be used to finance the doubling of child benefit over the life of a parliament . |
27 | To search for meteorites among the dark cobbles and boulders of dolerite that abound in such areas would indeed be an unrewarding task . |
28 | Variations in such practices would therefore account for later behaviour . |
29 | If your organisation is involved in foreign markets then reaction in these countries would also be important . |
30 | To go further in these directions would also require more boldly gestural language than Philip Vellacott 's plausible , if prosaic translation provides . |