Example sentences of "[conj] i [verb] [pron] would " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Othe possibilities include Brian Robson ( experienced international ) Ray Wilkins ( experienced & I think he 'd be pretty good ) .
2 Bozo stares up and down the road and wonders what to do before he finally fixes his bleary gaze where I hoped he would , and trudges away towards the phonebox .
3 I decided to rent a room for him in a house near ours , where I thought he would be safe for the moment .
4 where I presume you would just wan na hand that out to some guy and say get on with it .
5 I 'd be anchored where I reckoned she 'd get a little shelter from the bay in which she lay , but with a gentle south-westerly and no sign of any break in the weather , I was n't worried about her , and took the easiest line ashore .
6 ‘ You 're not going to believe this , ’ said Alex , ‘ but I actually picked up the phone to call you this morning , except I realized it would have been the middle of the night your end so I put it down again . ’
7 Except I think I would like to get out , break away , as it were , and see the world .
8 We had moved to the edges of our previously closed system of thought and action , both physically and philosophically , and almost implicitly came to recognize that the ‘ foundation metaphors ’ which Turner identifies as being crucial to transformational experience of liminality were making paradigmatic statements about our own cultural format ; although I know we would have been unable to articulate this .
9 I have a Roland U220 which would give me the sounds I want although I know it would not give me the great note-sequence loops which McLaughlin uses so beautifully .
10 Although I admit I 'd like to know exactly what those reasons were . ’
11 What you might do , although I say you 'd reject this particular model and that
12 Although I believe I would .
13 I think it 's the nearest we 'll get to it , and it 's in the White Paper and it can be used in exactly the sense that I gather you would like it to be used , in the discussions we have on the results of the scrutiny , and that would be the starting point there .
14 I loved him so much that I knew it would be all right .
15 I would have to bite back my angry words — that better men than he had driven the jeep but that I knew he would share their fate .
16 Also , my brother was such a good trumpet player that I knew I would never be as good as he was , so there was that in there too : like , ‘ God , I do n't really want follow in this guy 's footsteps . ' ’
17 I was shaken by its totality , its danger — here was a being that I knew I would die for without hesitation .
18 " I had chest pains so bad that I knew I would be unable to give 100 per cent . "
19 Er , I make the point I think that , erm , we should oppose the er , Deregulation Bill if it 's based on providing deregulation by Ministers , because I think that 's a constitutional point that is of great import , but the , the rest of it erm , are really sets of principles that I hope you 'd agree to , subject to amen amendment and dis discussion , because the information that we got is that the consultation period is going to be very tight indeed , and that it might not be able to go through the normal committee procedures in order to put things through erm , with er , proposals in that , er , in that respect .
20 The good thing about Sheff Utd ( from SCUMS point of view ) is that I doubt they would go there just to get a draw … they beat SCUM twice last year so might have thought they had a chance .
21 Yeah the main difficulty is in is in the time period because it 's it 's quite likely that I mean I 'd we 'd been we 'd been hoping that the target candidate could put in a reasonable amount of personal commitment to the campaign .
22 The working party on Equal Opportunities that I said I would convene ?
23 And s some suggestions that I said I 'd put forward to Janet about streamlining nominations and so on .
24 I did n't want John thinking that I said he would get her one .
25 Its just that I thought you would n't come here any more … not after last night . ’
26 And I just liked reading it so much that I thought you 'd like to read it too .
27 Except that I thought you 'd understand — and perhaps I did think that you had a right to know why I feel the way I do about … about anything permanent . ’
28 Stok joined in the last three words as I said them , and then he laughed So loud that I thought he would shake some of the cracked tiles off the wall .
29 The most frightening thing was that I thought it would never stop .
30 I said that I thought it would be alright and made arrangements to meet him again at the church on the following Saturday afternoon to discuss details .
  Next page