Example sentences of "[noun] would [adv] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Brown estimates that a loss on the server side would adversely impact NT 's position on the desktop .
2 ‘ He said it was inevitable , that bad blood would always surface in the next generation , and that the only way he could hope to save me was to chase the devil from my soul before he got a proper hold . ’
3 ‘ I am sure that Michelle would rather John had n't been married to Alison , but that does n't mean to say she is going to go out and murder her , let alone involve her much-loved sister in the crime ’ .
4 Despite his difficulties Barry did not indicate that he had revised his decision to seek a fourth consecutive term as mayor in the November 1990 elections ( although conviction on a felony charge would automatically debar him ) .
5 Many jurisdictions have taken the view that to insist on such service would unfairly disadvantage potential plaintiffs , and have provided that where an enterprise based abroad does business within the jurisdiction service may be effected at some business address there , without the need to serve any document abroad .
6 For example , the experience of members of the Women 's Cooperative Guild , who in both their own estimation and that of observers were adjudged respectable married women , shows that family misfortune , particularly in the form of sickness and unemployment , could quickly plunge a family into poverty , whereupon the wife would probably resort to strategies similar to those of her poorer sister .
7 Baxter found that a sow would cover her 30 kilometres inside a pen five metres square , and that several sows would happily farrow down together within such a small space .
8 The type of new installations that will be allowed if the paper becomes law are farm shops , sport and recreation facilities for activities such as clay pigeon shooting , BMX bikes and wargames , car parks , refreshment areas and educational centres would also burgeon .
9 I mean the constructivist would never Univers
10 It should be noted also that many sociologists would argue-particularly Goode , for example ( Goode , 1970 ) — that these changes are not simply confined to Britain and the United States but are taking place throughout the world , although at different paces and starting from different points .
11 In order to secure the payment of tribute , servicemen would often resort to taking hostages ( amanaty ) .
12 A lot of players would simply set-up and hit the ball directly at the flag , and them wonder why they did n't get the ball close .
13 Control had told him often enough that the agency would never surface in his defence if anything went wrong .
14 This kind of elementary boo-boo would certainly impact video speed .
15 If they failed at the game , Camazotz would swiftly behead them , and their spirits appeared as stars in the eastern sky .
16 For for fourteen er years ago when I studied erm communications at one of the things he said was the Sun paragraph would be short short of twenty words , whereas the tabloids would probably qualities they er full size papers would probably be longer , but interestingly enough the this introduction the introduction of the story about Princess Diana in the Sun is the same length as introduction about the story of Princess Diana in the Independent .
17 When the member of the team finds any colour she makes the sound of her team so that cows would always moo .
18 Smith once declared that The Cure would never court pop 's mainstream ; and that the mainstream would have to expand in order to embrace The Cure .
19 He went on to state that the Party would definitely affiliate to the Labour Party if accepted as a " revolutionary organisation " .
20 Failure to keep their friends in office would rapidly doom the Cunningham interest in these burghs to extinction , as councillors and trades voters started to reconsider their former loyalties and to listen to the argument of the Haldane partisans that the colonel had the ear of government .
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