Example sentences of "would be [verb] [adv prt] of the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Although the fine is severe , we were all hoping he 'd be kicked out of the club by the League .
2 I 'd be able to get on the horse but I 'd be ruled out of the Olympics because betablockers are banned .
3 The remote would be blasted out of the sky in less than a fiftieth of a second . ’
4 She told herself that the best thing she could do would be to go out of the house and climb up to where the buzzards and the ravens nested on the clifftop , but she did n't pay herself much attention .
5 That would be jumping out of the frying-pan into a raging inferno .
6 If Gerald Thomas went to his flat to pick him up , he would be looking out of the window waiting for his car to arrive .
7 Last week the Northern Regional Health Authority announced that 221 mentally handicapped people would be moved out of the hospital over the next three years .
8 I had done very little imaginative work and would not have regarded this as my greatest negotiating success , but it was certainly so regarded by Harold Wilson who assured me that my name would be kept out of the proceedings , since I had then , and retain , a keen dislike for gratuitous publicity .
9 The paper would be whisked out of the cynical ghetto of Fleet Street , and away from distorted , degenerate London priorities — back to basics and closer to ‘ the people ’ .
10 The obvious move would be get out of the district . ’
11 Mr David Mellor , Treasury Chief Secretary , claimed that if Labour went ahead with the tax increases proposed by Mr John Smith , the shadow Chancellor , money would be taken out of the economy just when extra spending was needed to boost demand .
12 With defensive fields I would fire the ball in , and if I finally achieved a breakthrough I would be taken out of the attack .
13 The Audit Commission pointed out that 4 million people would be lifted out of the penury of having to pay it and that it would be possible to concentrate on those who can genuinely afford to pay but who do not .
14 The unit general manager responsible for that hospital has made it clear more than once that if additional baby heaters were needed they would be purchased out of the hospital budget . ’
15 Earlier yesterday Mr Patten had dismissed as a ‘ ridiculous rumour ’ a report that Hong Kong would be frozen out of the early stages of any Sino-British negotiations .
16 My mother and I were terrified that my father would be picked out of the prison and shot .
17 A scientist who tried to cope with the orbit of Uranus by proposing that the force between Uranus and the sun obeyed something other than the inverse square law would be opting out of the Newtonian research programme .
18 A BRITISH Airways crew feared they would be sucked out of the cockpit when the windscreen shattered at 33,000ft yesterday .
19 ‘ I said it was terrible , to ruin one of Lehar 's most wonderful love songs like that , and Ingrid , he made it quite plain that if I did n't fall in with Therese 's wishes — exactly — I would be thrown out of the company . ’
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