Example sentences of "would [be] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | And I 'm sure it 'd be well worth er , er getting this down , no . |
2 | Oh that 'd be about quarter nine . |
3 | If I sent that today it 'd be there Wednesday morning would n't it ? |
4 | Hello , said you 'd be down town this morning |
5 | Do n't forget , the paper prominently said , that the first of the two Celebration of Canadian Racing meetings would be held the evening with the regular post time of 7 p.m. , while the second meeting , including the running of the Jockey Club Race Train Stakes would be tomorrow afternoon , post time 1.30 . |
6 | Well , he would be tomorrow morning . |
7 | The one to watch would be tomorrow morning 's debate on the Government 's immigration policy . |
8 | Can the hon. Gentleman confirm that that means that the average family in this country would be approximately £2,000 better off if it lived in Italy ? |
9 | The maximum cash payment by Anglo-Welsh under the Cash Alternative would be approximately £45.5m . |
10 | Gladstone pointed out the closeness of Hunt 's estimate of £230,000 to the tender figure of £232,000 and on that basis confidently predicted that the cost including fittings and furnishings and architects ' fees would be approximately £310,000 . |
11 | If the service company were allowed to generate profit of £35,000 then the 15% tax saving would be approximately £5,250 . |
12 | Even if only half these elderly people find that the withdrawal of tax relief makes private medical insurance too expensive for them and , consequently , revert once more to relying solely on the NHS for treatment , the cost to the nation of providing this care would be approximately £136 million . |
13 | ‘ There would n't be that much island employment anyway , it would be mostly outsiders in doing the work . |
14 | Nothing was further from my thoughts ; my reason would be simply enjoyment , and if it was the most commonplace thing to do my delight would not be decreased one bit . |
15 | Unfortunately , it would be simply days before they could book a room and equipment for a screening . |
16 | Ian Clarke , a Bank of England executive , and his wife Jacqueline promptly turned back to Surrey so they would be nearer Heathrow and Gatwick airports — and better placed to take off for Australia . |
17 | In Powys , the HLCA payment would be either £28/LU or £42/LU for sheep ( £44.50/LU for cows ) in the ‘ severely disadvantaged ’ zone which occupies most of the county . |
18 | But if Sunderland won , then the team relegated would be either Bristol or Coventry , depending on the outcome of their game against each other . |
19 | Nobody wants prisoners or lunatics on their doorstep , and there had been a well-fought campaign to demonstrate that the women of Garfield would be both prisoners and lunatics . |
20 | The only other clear winners from a protracted contest would be both firms ' lawyers . |
21 | His own life would be both source and reflection of his work . |
22 | would be both people 's fault . |
23 | At York , the first pageant proceeded to the first station at 4.30am , and it would be around midnight when the last play reached the twelfth and last station . |
24 | After that I went to bed ; I suppose it would be around midnight . ’ |
25 | Sony 's SuperMicro Division forecast that the combined Sony-NEC share of the workstation market would be over 50% by 1993–94 . |
26 | The actual cost of the loan , over 15 years , would be nearly £50,000 by the time you had paid it in full . |
27 | He imagined labour as it would be , had it not been formulated by capitalism , and say that it would then be merely an aspect of the total business of living , unseparated from such activities as recreation , consumption , family life : that it would be just part of existence . |
28 | The outlay would be well worth while in terms of the publicity featuring all the hotel 's celebrity guests . |
29 | We are ( sadly ) used to antagonism from some anglers and landowners but when a leading conservation officer says ( as has been reported ) that the World Wild Fund for Nature 's contribution of around £40,000 would be well worth while if boats were kept off one mile of water , it is hard to swallow , especially when you bear in mind the relatively few miles of water which are available to use even with the protection of the Rights of Way Act ! |
30 | Many heterosexual women stayed away specifically because there would be out lesbians there . |