Example sentences of "they would be [verb] for " in BNC.

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1 Er they would n't look for you when you were there , but if you 'd gone out somewhere , oh they 'd be looking for you .
2 With sons they 'd be cared for in their old age , their death rituals would be properly performed and their souls would rest , satisfied .
3 It was midway through a Friday afternoon , and Adele Venetz had taken the restaurant 's van to the cash-and-carry for all the last-minute supplies they 'd be needing for Saturday 's party catering job , leaving her sister and Alina to manage the business alone .
4 They 'd be talking for days on end .
5 The chemists say they were promised that they 'd be paid for providing the service , but so far they have n't seen a penny .
6 Whether the pups had been put there in the hope they would be cared for , or just dumped , is not exactly known .
7 But nobody told the fish over millions of years of evolution that one day they would be prized for their decorative/educational/food value and put in overcrowded conditions ( relatively speaking ) in glass tanks/bowls , or ponds .
8 After a couple of years they would be exchanged for someone else of sufficiently high position .
9 Drivers are professionals who are employed to race where their teams compete and I do n't think they would be penalised for doing their jobs . ’
10 Headhunters were also more likely to offer a dynamic rather than a static solution , Gozzard suggested : they would be looking for what was to happen to the company in the future , not just today , and the role of the successful candidate in effecting change .
11 And they would be looking for a bed for the night and it would be in the old hay shed that we would put them but there would n't be a problem .
12 To the outsider they would be mistaken for smartly uniformed security guards rather than the trained storm-troopers they were .
13 Senior Soviet officials stressed that the patrols were an emergency measure decided in the face of the soaring crime rate , and denied that they would be used for political ends or would violate human rights .
14 The solicitors informed the local authority that they would be applying for an order for costs against the authority .
15 The 18 later left the building after being assured they would be considered for emigration .
16 He said : ‘ They did not have certain top-class players out there , but the majority of those who came in were £1 million players and I felt that they would be fighting for a place in the Cup replay . ’
17 They were a superstitious lot and tomorrow they would be fighting for their lives .
18 One engineering firm had so many applications for time off that it warned absentees they would be suspended for three weeks .
19 They would be waiting for him at the train 's next scheduled stop , the guard would see to that .
20 They would be waiting for us . ’
21 in comparison with what they would be paying for a market stall then it would be it 's way out of their their
22 I have interviewed people who had spent 30 years in a big bureaucracy who said that the 6-month development task force was the only thing they were excited by and the only thing they would be remembered for — change was their mark on the organization .
23 All that they would be tendering for would be to actually run the facility , and there 's no reason to suppose that a private contractor can do that any more cheaply , if they deliver the same quality of service , as the Local Authority can do , so it would n't actually save money , all it would do would mean that control of the level of service that was being delivered at those facilities was lost from the Council to a private contractor .
24 If they said John was a prophet and thereby received his authority from God , they would be criticised for not listening to him .
25 They had been booked in advance on a quota basis by Čedok , so they would be paid for whether any one ate at them or not .
26 The Royal African Company came under criticism from the West India sugar planters , who clamoured for more slaves to be supplied without explaining how they would be paid for , and also from other English merchants who thought they could do a better job of supplying slaves .
27 Their support role was of vital importance and they would be paid for their work , allowing them to keep themselves and their children .
28 Pray for all those training for the mission field at the Glasgow Bible College or the Scottish Baptist College , that they would be anointed for their task and that they would not lose their first love of Jesus Himself as they study scriptures .
29 The railcoaches being the largest single class of trams , it was inevitable that they would be chosen for post-war rebuilding to suit changed circumstances .
30 They meant well of course , but they were trying so hard to be sympathetic and reassuring , saying they would be praying for her .
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