Example sentences of "which would have [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The document then put forward three possible options : the setting up of a small central body , along the lines of Model A in the English Green Paper , which would have a majority of its membership from Welsh local authorities ; a Model B type central body which would disburse government funds in Wales and would take from local authority control the colleges providing a significant amount of higher education , including teacher training ; and the direct association in Wales of the solution adopted in England through the setting up of a Welsh sub-committee of the main organization .
2 I saw the formation of the Black Workers ' Group and the concessions that we had won as a lever or a rolling stone which would have a knock-on effect .
3 That paragraph refers to high quality of environment and agricultural land quality as factors which would have a bearing on the distribution of er erm employment land , and I just want to er assure the panel that I do n't think any of the allocations that we 've made er on the strength of the erm er consultations that we 've entered into would cause problems er for either qual high quality environment or high quality agricultural land .
4 The Labour Party unveiled plans for a women 's ministry , which would have a seat in the cabinet .
5 At the other extreme , a machine tool company was considering the purchase of a ( CNC ) machine tool which would have the facility for manual data input ( MDI ) .
6 That same day , San Sebastian was the trysting place of a series of people whose principal concern , apart from winning the war , was the achievement of a political union " which would have the appearance of spontaneity " .
7 A referendum would be held , by May 1992 at the latest , on the constitutional amendments necessary to allow the convening of a constituent assembly which would have the authority to approve these reforms .
8 It called for more powers to be transferred to the European Commission and to the European Parliament , which would have the power to veto with a majority vote legislation proposed by the Council of Ministers .
9 The revised draft committed its participants to a ‘ sovereign federal democratic state ’ based upon a voluntary union of republics with equal rights , each of which would have the right to choose its own forms of property and government .
10 It was for this reason that he felt compelled to offer the Liberals the alternative vote , an electoral system which would have the effect of entrenching the third party as part of the political system .
11 The Bank stuck to a policy of recommending that subsidies should be ended , which would have the effect of increasing electricity prices and encouraging energy efficiency .
12 Although the Committee recommended that the BBC should not accept advertising on its television channels on the grounds that it would not be a satisfactory long-term solution to the impending restructuring of broadcasting , it made a number of significant proposals which would have the effect of recreating broadcasting as a market of consumers and producers .
13 Creech Jones congratulated the committee on producing a constitution which would have the effect of cutting the CPP down to size .
14 Article 100A has in fact been used in the context of measures relating to health , such as food additives , in the context of consumer protection , such as the indication of prices , as in the legislation on air pollution by gaseous emissions from motor vehicles , to give examples from important areas that could otherwise be subject to national legislation which would have the effect of hindering the free movement of goods .
15 Any provision in a contract which would have the effect of excluding or restricting liability for a misrepresentation is ineffective , except to the extent that the clause is shown to satisfy the requirement of reasonableness — Misrepresentation Act 1967 , s.3 as amended by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 .
16 This also applies to an application for any order which would have the effect of varying or discharging an existing order .
17 An application under the Children Act which would have the effect of varying or discharging a direction or order made in wardship proceedings before 14 October 1991 should be made to the High Court even though the wardship itself may have ceased on that date under the transitional provisions ( In Re C ( a Minor ) , CA ( 1991 ) , cited above , see also Appendix 5 ) .
18 The defeasibility suggestion could be said to provide an extension of the earlier requirement that there be no relevant falsehoods ; we now look beyond those propositions actually believed by the believer to propositions which would have an effect if they were believed .
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