Example sentences of "[pron] be [det] [noun] [pron] would " in BNC.

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1 But then , of course , I hasten to add , there are many valets who would never dream of indulging in this sort of folly — who are , in fact , professionals of the highest discernment .
2 Certainly we need road space for those who must drive , but there are many drivers who would willingly change ( or revert ) to public transport given some inducement — like services that are more frequent , more reliable and more widely available , or a further disincentive to the scandal of non-essential company cars that make commuting free of charge to their users .
3 THERE are many people who would love to buy the work of young British artists : there are plenty of young artists in Britain who would love to sell it .
4 But there are many people who would not find it fulfilling to be themselves at any cost and at the expense of another .
5 If we are asking when the issue of who were England 's legitimate rulers was resolved , then the answer can clearly not be 1660 or 1688 ; 1715 , with the failure of the Jacobite rebellion might have a strong claim , although there are some scholars who would maintain that Jacobitism continued to be a significant threat thereafter , so that the succession did not finally disappear as a political issue until after the failure of the rebellion in 1745 .
6 There are some things I 'd like to write down — ‘
7 There are some purists who would argue that this is no bad thing , and that those interested in the human brain and human behaviour should stick to studying humans .
8 If teachers only got paid for pupils passing their exams , there are some pupils who 'd never get any education at all .
9 Er , because clearly there are some points you would n't want to be too specific about .
10 This is exacerbated by the fact that there are some extremists who would argue that psychology is nothing but a crude way of approaching brain function that has been superseded by advances in physiological technique .
11 A slightly different approach diagnoses the Gettier counter-examples as arising because there are some truths which would have destroyed the believer 's justification had he believed them ( cf.
12 There are several things we would like to do to improve the readability of this value : ( a ) Leading zeros should be suppressed and replaced by blanks .
13 As we have often said , running trains or restoring locomotives is well beyond what a small society like ours could hope to achieve , but there are several ideas I would like to explore that might be realistic .
14 I 'll let Peter come back to you in just a moment erm and there are more question I would ask you as well but erm now we must take a short break with time at nine twenty six .
15 Are there are any questions you would like to ask ?
16 Details have still to be finalised and if there are any choreographers who would like to work with the team please contact June Bascombe .
17 Moreover , there were many bishops who would have considered themselves first and foremost monks : St Cuthbert of Lindisfarne ( d. 687 ) had a respectable ancestry reaching back to St Martin of Tours ( d. c .397 ) .
18 His non-ritualism was still , in the early 1930s , perfectly normal and there were many Anglicans who would have shared it , though perhaps not all would have been quite so dogged about it as he .
19 There were many things he would have liked to have done but he needed this man , who , with a combination of chance and logic , could reach the truths which might affect the realm .
20 if there were any jobs I would be quite happy to take part- time .
21 There were several questions I would have liked to have put to them , but had I done so I would have altered the environment for them and made them hyper-conscious of their limitations .
22 There 's little doubt she would be excellent in the job .
23 Oh yeah there , there 's some people I would n't take them to .
24 I do n't suppose there 's any way you would be interested , is there ? ’
25 There 's another matter I 'd like to discuss , if I may ? ’
26 She said : ‘ If there 's another explanation I 'd love to hear it . ’
27 The judge said there was little chance she 'd ever be freed .
28 The judge said there was little chance she 'd ever be freed .
29 An ex-boyfriend of Suzannah said : ‘ She has a quiet , gentle personality and there was some surprise she would go for someone like Bates . ’
30 There was some moon which would illuminate the scene suddenly , then be gone as though switched off by the scudding cloud .
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