Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] would [verb] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The structure of courses should be such that the majority would require a form of integrated study such as that described in the Grouped Course Scheme within existing TEC policy .
2 Full private funding of the link would require a rate of return of between 12%percnt ; and 15% and British Rail has argued that the project can not even provide the 8% return demanded of public sector investment .
3 However , s 3 of the UCTA would control a clause which would exempt the seller from liability for failure to comply with a specified delivery date .
4 In return , the writer would give a product commitment .
5 Held , the indictment would be marked ‘ stayed ’ on the ground that the continuation of the case would constitute a misuse of the processes of the court and a fair trial was not possible .
6 On Sept. 8 they agreed that the victor would form a government which would " guarantee national reconciliation and reconstruction " but specifically excluded the possibility of a formal coalition between their parties .
7 So the plot was that the squadron would make a mould in mahogany to fit the cami-knickers and this became a very prized trophy of No 84 Squadron .
8 Accessing the information would be improved by providing procedures that would be easier to use , and the structure of the index would enable a search on a variety of parameters , with each item adequately cross-referenced .
9 The Admiral 's flagship would set men ashore at Cap-Haitien on the east coast , where the Admiral would establish a garrison in Henri Christophe 's hilltop fortress known simply as The Citadel .
10 The driver would have a microprocessor controlled throttle to give greatest efficiency .
11 And when she did the cottage would have a shine on it .
12 Acharya estimated that the budget would leave a deficit of NRs2,080 million ( US$49,000,000 ) , to be covered by domestic borrowing and the sale of treasury bills .
13 Outside Flanders , Robert 's sister 's marriage to Roger of Sicily was a mark of his new position in the world ; like Louis VI 's sister 's marriage to Bohemond of Antioch , it stretched French kinship connections into the new Norman colonies , ensuring that travellers from the homeland would find a welcome in those distant parts .
14 The guardians proposed that the Borough would contribute a quarter of the cost of the building and payment for the patients they sent .
15 Following the defeat of Kenneth Kaunda in the presidential elections in October , the United National Independence Party ( UNIP ) accepted his resignation as party leader on Jan. 6 ; the UNIP would hold a congress in April to elect a new leader as well as all members of the central committee .
16 Under the new Constitution , the President would appoint a government on the basis of the results of the parliamentary elections .
17 In contrast to earlier fears that the ‘ special relationship ’ might have been in jeopardy , he said he had no doubt that the president would remain a friend of Britain and that the relationship between the pair could not be more easy .
18 The idea was that the private sector would build and finance a number of roads and the department would pay a rent for them on the basis of how much traffic used them .
19 Stating that the 11th Mayfest would place greater emphasis on quality than quantity , Robson said the programme would strike a balance between new Scottish work and international attractions , while at the same time it would celebrate the talents of the local community .
20 The programme would have a budget of $200 million for environmental sensors on military submarines , ships and aircraft .
21 A cart pulled out from the courtyard , driven by a soldier taking the two coffins down to the village church where the priest would sing a requiem and those two pathetic brothers be buried and , in time , forgotten .
22 ( The pecking of the spot is the chick 's signal method of asking for food : if the spot was on its parent 's , rather than a model bill , the chick would receive a meal . )
23 I just wish the club would make a decision . ’
24 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 .
25 The plan would make a lot more sense if pedestrian crossing lights were introduced , but co-ordinated with other existing traffic lights from Teviot Place to the bottom of The Mound so as to reduce the number of stop-start cycles required by through traffic .
26 This always used to happen in older ballets when the hero would take a step forward with a slight stamp before he ‘ swore to marry ’ the heroine .
27 Normal results on breast examination and the mammogram would make a breast primary even less likely .
28 The legislature would have a veto over appointments to key Cabinet posts , including that of Prime Minister , but would be subordinate to the President and would have little influence over economic policy .
29 So the Queen would hire a nanny to look after them
30 Merkulov , one of Kuchma 's close advisers , said that the council would create a currency market and stock exchange , planned to increase the proportion of property in private ownership from 3 up to 50 per cent , and would , in particular , assist private motor manufacturers ; the government was negotiating with the US-based Chrysler Corporation on plans to build new factories in Ukraine .
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