Example sentences of "[adv] it would [vb infin] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It would also weaken the case , the building of third runway at Heathrow and lastly it would reduce the traffic on our already overcrowded road network in the South East and hopefully remove one of the arguments for widening the M twenty five to more than four , four lanes .
2 Similarly the court in Bullivant ( Roger ) Ltd v Ellis took note of the duration of a restrictive covenant in a former employee 's contract of employment in determining how long it would restrain the defendant from using an index of customers removed from his former employers .
3 So it would start the timing mechanism running at the moment it dropped it over the side .
4 Well I mean the normally it would kill the grass , but it wo n't matter this year .
5 Soon it would reach the place where I had turned to the right .
6 INDIAN police have arrested more than 27,000 people to prevent them attending a banned Hindu nationalist rally , and the right-wing party that had organised it said yesterday it would sue the government for repression .
7 The more accurately you wanted to measure the position of the particle , the greater the energy of the packet you would have to use and thus the more it would disturb the particle .
8 This would , he considered ; effect a ventilation through both levels — " much needed " in the Deep Level ; also it would drain the soles in the level above .
9 If a motion was suggested for reducing the team 's innings by five runs every time a player was out it would encourage the taking of wickets , which would in turn reduce the role of the leg stump ‘ spinner ’ and medium pace ‘ dobber ’ , place greater emphasis on attacking fields , potentially creating more runs — particularly boundaries — for the batsmen and recreating the ‘ traditions ’ of one-day cricket .
10 If the show was extended too far back it would spread the interest a bit too thinly .
11 Blatantly it would limit the choice .
12 Rhys considers it unwise to attempt radically to alter taxes on large cars , as proposed by Labour : ‘ You ca n't just decimate the luxury car trade , ’ he says , ‘ Most big cars may well come from Germany but you have to consider how it would affect the dealer network . ’
13 But he sympathised with others : ‘ You can see how it would do the post offices harm and nobody would want that , ’ he said .
14 The Government would be prepared to consider proposals er for private funds , but the British Library would also need to prepare a business case showing how it would meet the cost of the building and the ongoing costs .
15 Yet it changed pop 's possible meanings irrevocably : if pop was about marketing , then it would include the marketing in the actual product ( namely — McLaren 's ‘ Ten Lessons ’ in ‘ The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle' ) .
16 It would never get rid of the damned things permanently but at least it would give the Ryans a breathing space .
17 To provide a settlement that would enable the purchase of a new engine would involve unacceptable betterment and indeed it would exceed the sum insured .
18 The very poor even sold the combings of their hair , to hawkers who came by crying for it , and passed it on to the dollmakers in Naples where it would stuff the turban of a king or tassel the tail of a donkey for a Nativity crib at Christmas .
19 If they acted accordingly it would increase the risk that just such an epidemic would occur , ’ he warned .
20 Colchester Borough Council 's planning committee decided to delegate the decision on the application for the church at The Centre on the town 's Greenstead estate to the director of planning and development , John Hutton , provided the applicants submitted new drawings showing more brickwork features and better windows , otherwise it would make the decision at a later meeting .
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