Example sentences of "[det] would have [verb] " in BNC.

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1 The Company had hoped to be allowed to run cars across in service , but this would have necessitated Parliamentary Powers , which were not needed if a line was never to be used for passenger carrying .
2 This would have plummeted to single figures but for the influx of wealthy Iraqi ‘ refugee holidaymakers ’ now fleeing Saddam Hussein 's regime .
3 This would have prevented the loss of nearly three-quarters of the money .
4 Japan had few reserves to continue the struggle , though to have admitted this would have courted political disaster .
5 He had a supply with him when he was captured , but this would have run out by then .
6 She had clearly by various decree created a force majeure over mineral workings and whilst at the time this would have appeared an admirable standing , nevertheless the monopoly began to serve , in later years , as a disincentive to exploration and development .
7 This would have to carry the 3.0 m ewes which the Meat and Livestock Commission consider would be needed to provide the present contribution , 50% of national lamb production , from upland and hill ewes as well as the 800,000 or so cows receiving subsidy .
8 You 'd think this would have prepared me .
9 Among other things , this would have engendered the tradition of Herod 's Massacre of the Innocents .
10 But he found himself in a double bind ; the bankers said they would withdraw their support if he left and this would have killed the business instantly .
11 Had they played the ball down th channels or to the corner flags , this would have turned their defence and let us regroup and play in their half .
12 This would have increased after-tax profits of £193m for 1991 to £310m for the group 's life companies .
13 It is thought that this would have increased the flow of heat to the base of the lithosphere sufficiently to cause a phase change in the uppermost continental mantle after a delay of up to 70 Ma ( the time taken for heat to be conducted from the base of the lithosphere to just below the Moho ) .
14 He could have written them by hand but this would have defeated their objective .
15 The following were among the findings reported at a conference in Anchorage , Alaska : — brain damage in seals similar to that found in people who die from solvent abuse ; this would have disoriented the animals and affected basic physiological functions like breathing ; it is suspected that many seals drowned , but because dead seals sink an accurate assessment of deaths has not been possible ; — the disappearance of a group of killer whales that had lived in the sound , possibly also due to the " solvent abuse effect " ; — deaths among sea otters not only from hypothermia ( because oil stuck to their fur destroyed its insulating properties ) but from emphysema caused by breathing in toxic fumes and from liver and kidney damage caused by ingesting oil ; — failure to breed among many species of birds since the accident , either because of the death rate within colonies at the time ( in the case of guillemots ) or because continued exposure to oil-polluted food sources is preventing reproduction ; — death tolls of up to 40 per cent for eggs laid by salmon , herring and other fish , and deformities and withered muscles among fish that did hatch .
16 ( Little of all this would have reached the public but for two courageous soldier-MPs , Col. Josiah Wedgwood and Maj. Victor Cazalet ) .
17 This , this is er , inch and half too short or else this would have done the
18 A couple of years ago this would have sounded like fiction ; soon it may be fact .
19 This would have involved giving the criterion of gender identity precedence over physiological criteria .
20 Some such process may have been originally responsible for the separation of England and France by the formation of the Straits of Dover , although this would have involved the breaching of a much broader barrier than the Purbeck-Isle of Wight ridge .
21 After recording a verdict of accidental death coroner Nicholas Gardiner said it was known that the seats should have been rear facing but he did n't think this would have affected the outcome .
22 This would have remained the impression if Scriven had not been followed by Dr David Fowler of the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology ( ITE ) .
23 This would have led to science becoming a babel ; but it shows the widespread fear among chemists that their science would be ‘ reduced ’ to something else by armchair theorists who did not know how to hold test-tubes or blow glass T-pieces .
24 This would have led to specialisation , staleness , and a situation where an officer would lose touch in a world of changing regulations .
25 This would have led to well-defined thermodynamic and cosmological arrows of time , as we observe .
26 [ This would have led to difficulties in checking citations to related papers in the present study ] .
27 This would have conflicted with Haile Selassie 's intention of curtailing the power of the feudal Rases and centralizing the administration .
28 With the already established public accounts committee , this would have given four such bodies , each with a salaried chairman , and the Catholics were to be given two of the chairs with the committees being made up to reflect parliamentary seats .
29 This would have given him the opportunity to be a restraining influence against the extremists .
30 This would have given an identical set of equations , but with V being replaced by - V , and P 3 by P 2 .
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