Example sentences of "would have a " in BNC.

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1 She and Lucy would have a drink after work on Fridays , sometimes an early supper , a few hours to unwind : a pattern pleasing to both .
2 If they took a whirl at the minister , he would have a fine sight of the fun .
3 The Stockholm Open would have a strong claim , but so too would Tokyo , not least for the enormous amount of Japanese funding there is these days for tennis .
4 But alike in the British and the American traditions the expectation that the poet would have a message was so ingrained that even by those readers most alert to and informed about Eliot 's French connections The Waste Land was still thought to deliver an urgent signal — usually about the bankruptcy of the European , or the Western , cultural and civic traditions .
5 But they also said the Jews would have a homeland in Palestine and agreed that when the war ended the French would control Syria and what was then called Mount Lebanon .
6 Sir Antony , in a letter to Senator John Warner , who is the leading Republican on the Senate armed services committee , said that ‘ any withholding of productive funding … would have a knock-on effect which could delay the arrival of the first missiles for the Royal Navy , and continue to impose time and cost penalties on the British Trident programme ’ .
7 Economists are warning that a prolonged strike in the industry — one of the few sectors where the US enjoys a positive trade balance — would have a serious impact on the American trade deficit .
8 The consortium behind the $7bn management buyout , in which BA would have a 15 per cent stake , admitted yesterday that it had been unable to complete its part of the financing .
9 If DeFreitas is out and Lamb remains unable to throw the ball properly , England 's outfield would have a Madame Tussaud 's look about it , which is also a point in favour of David Capel above Derek Pringle .
10 From what we already knew about its audiences and programme content , we expected that television would have a stronger influence on public information and perceptions than on public attitudes and choices ; while the press , particularly the mass-selling tabloids , would have a stronger influence on public attitudes and choices than on public information and perceptions .
11 From what we already knew about its audiences and programme content , we expected that television would have a stronger influence on public information and perceptions than on public attitudes and choices ; while the press , particularly the mass-selling tabloids , would have a stronger influence on public attitudes and choices than on public information and perceptions .
12 In New Zealand 's ’ King Country' — so called because of the Maori kings who fought a guerrilla war against the settling English — Maori lads fresh from rounding up the droves of merino sheep from the bush clad hills would have a night out in the one horse town and go to the fleapit .
13 Hugh Dalton , the Chancellor of the Exchequer , said an agreement would have a powerful effect on the crucial loan negotiations , and was probably as much as could be achieved .
14 But as far as Great Britain Ltd was concerned and building a food industry that would have a major part to play in China and Brazil and other developing countries , I was sorry the shareholders took the view that they did .
15 It they had been right , matrilineal society would tend to have a lower level of technological development while patrilineal societies would have a higher level .
16 Smith conceded that higher taxes on big cars would have a harmful effect on the UK 's motor industry , hurting Jaguar in particular , which is already suffering a severe fall in demand .
17 With Jerome out of the way and all that money for themselves , she felt they would have a much happier relationship …
18 John Young , a larger-than-life figure , had automatically assumed the Princess would sit in the Royal Box , and had sold tickets in the belief that everyone in the theatre would have a view of the Princess .
19 You can not buy an office copier in Eastern Europe because if you could you would have a free press . ’
20 While making no secret of the Federal Republic 's readiness to provide massive aid for a democratic East Germany , the Chancellor emphasised that virtually all of eastern Europe , from Poland to Yugoslavia , would have a claim of the support and solidarity of Western Europe .
21 Opposition to the deal is being led by Palau 's small but powerful group of traditional women elders , who say the agreement would have a devastating social economic and political impact on Palau 's society and culture .
22 Boeing said the new plane , which is derived from the 767X project , would have a wider body than the existing 767 plane used by British airlines and new wings .
23 The existing complaints department would have a new role directly investigating complaints by telephone , correspondence and , if necessary , face-to-face interviews .
24 Kingfisher claims the combined company would have a market share of 22 per cent , though other estimates are that it would be above the 25 per cent threshold for a reference .
25 The important point is this : whether or not Kingfisher-plus-Dixons would have a market share of 26 per cent or 22 per cent , a successful takeover would give a single company a large and powerful share of electrical retailing .
26 The Task Force on ‘ the environmental dimension ’ of the internal market described itself as ‘ much concerned ’ with the transport sector , which it thought would have a greater impact on the environment than any other sector .
27 Property markets worldwide have crashed or look about to ; especially in Japan , a collapse in land and property prices would have a powerfully contractionary effect on the economy as a whole .
28 Successful efforts to rescue the ghettos in just four cities ( Chicago , New York , Detroit and Newark ) would have a dramatic effect on the numbers at the bottom of the heap .
29 The Labour Party unveiled plans for a women 's ministry , which would have a seat in the cabinet .
30 Even if they were sufficiently eminent , not all of the members of the Royal Society would have a place in the History of Science as we might think of it now .
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