Example sentences of "would have [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 we 'd have no nuclear weapons and
2 They came down in their own time , after they 'd left off work , and they 'd have a small job done ; and then they 'd take it back ready for work the next morning .
3 Or trying to , but I 'd have a great deal more chance of success if people did n't keep trying to drag the whole sordid mess out into the open .
4 And if we did if we were to consider that you we 'd refuse you on the grounds that it was done without permission , you 'd have a perfect legitimate right to appeal above our heads and the Department of the Environment would rule against you could rule against us as they did with Mr Crendon
5 ‘ I thought we 'd have a good laugh when you came in , ’ she complained .
6 Then I 'd have a good blast when I got home , like .
7 We 'd have a good chance of overpowering them . ’
8 ( Jocularly ) Well , I 'd have a good look at your coins for a start !
9 We 'd have a good time . "
10 Now once he got in for his half , half pint in , in the in the passage he 'd have , he 'd have a good swig and , and it was about when he 'd got to bottom of the glass put it down .
11 ‘ Just so that you 'd have a good excuse for keeping me a prisoner here ? ’
12 Also , you 'd have a built-in baby-sitter . ’
13 She said I 'd have a real good time here — playing sports and sleeping in the dorm with all the other boys .
14 When you heard me I was imagining a process whereby you 'd have a strategic sites policy in the structure plan which would enable a local authority in preparing its local plan if it wished to identify a strategic site and that would then become in the local plan , you know subject to all those consultation processes , and then it 's part of the portfolio that is available in the published arena with a statutory framework behind it .
15 The fridge-freezer otherwise you 'd get up every morning and you 'd have a right mess in your cupboard would n't you ?
16 It got to the point where you could have one musical act , then you 'd have a puppeteering act , all on a Sunday night under the guise of the Beckenham folk club .
17 I should have guessed you 'd have a legitimate business .
18 We thought we 'd have a nice family evening in front of the television . ’
19 Then I think we 'd be in business , then I 'm sure you 'd have a nice little earner on your hands .
20 ‘ If this property boom suddenly collapses , or if the government decides to jack up the bank rate to curb consumer spending , then you might find your loans withdrawn , in which case you 'd have a serious cash-flow problem on your hands . ’
21 He 's the best bloke I know and if there were a few more like him , we 'd have a decent society in this country — instead of the crap we 've got ! ’
22 Du n no , well you ca n't talk all the time you 'd have a sore throat would n't you ?
23 the safety officers of today , oh they 'd have a blue fit if if they saw such things you know .
24 But I still felt as though I 'd have a nervous breakdown if I had to cope for much longer … .
25 At least there the floor would be still , and she would n't be feeling so horribly queasy , and she 'd have a dry bed .
26 but I should think he 'd have a smelly vodka vodka shit .
27 I suspect now that you know I mean I they might still to move given to one or two of my family members , but basically I could more openly say you know that in fact I suppose my view in Britain but not in Australia but my view in Britain is okay , the Royal Family could continue to exist they must A pay taxes B I do n't genuflect to any of them and C we 've got ta put them in perspective they 're in which is they 're a tourist attraction erm you know but I and I can make those comments which would be met by a lot of Britons with hostility , people who would totally disagree with me and say well they are the Royals and you know bow , bow , bow , but others would agree with me and that is something that has changed over the last three decades it really has , it 's changed during , during my absence in Australia , it is something you know that I came back to and I mean I kept , I 've been back about three or four weeks and there 's a pro I mean there 's some delightful radio programmes here comedy , political comedy shows and there was one show I listened to and I had been back a couple of weeks and it was about erm the Queen had a P R issue and she had to sort of do something about it , so she decided they 'd have a public execution of Edward and they described Edward was a cream puff and they the Queen and and er Andrew and everybody else was on the balcony at er Buck House and the crowds are cheering and the rolled and the the execution .
28 We 'd have a full scale fight on our hands with those guys if we went ahead with that proposal ! ’
29 They 'd have a little fancy shawl or My Grandma used to always have a fancy shawl that Just a small thing that came , you know , a bit down their back and And my Grandma used to wear erm a white much It was just thing like a baby 's A cotton thing , tied with a just a string , you know just to erm just a tie under her chin and it would have a wee bit of lace s on the corner , or the or the end of the tie , that was through the day and it was all ruffled , and then when she was on holiday and came into town she had a a thing on her head made of velvet and it all had fancy little things in it .
30 so she 's er , she 's waiting for 'em to come to do that , anyway she 's er , somebody rang her did n't they and they asked her if she 'd have a little boy of four months old , Thursdays and Fridays all day and she started this week with him , so I said well Pauline
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