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Example sentences for "would just"

  • We would designate a place outside for them and we would just have to take the heat that was given to us by the press for not permitting them in there, but in view of what had happened that we would never permit this to occur again.

  • I would just have to guess but I would suggest probably 20 people.

  • I would say, if the Committee would be interested, I would just as soon you look at it.

  • Now, having summed up the description of these great events spoken of by these Prophets, I would just remark, there is no difficulty in understanding them all to be perfectly plain and literal in their fulfilment.

  • He said we would just eat a little to settle our stomachs, and then go out to Thanksgiving dinner.

  • I had sparred with the corporal several times in camp, and I knew I could knock him out easy, and I made up my mind that the first indignity he offered me I would just "lam him one.

  • I thought this over a good deal, and concluded that if I was called upon to go into another fight, where there was any chance of anybody being killed, I would just have a relapse, and go to the hospital again till it was over.

  • I don't think it, because if I got it in money I would just lay it down on the counter and get goods for it.

  • It might practically make very little difference to the dealer; it would just be taking it out of the one pocket and putting it into the other, but it would be more business-like, and a simpler plan.

  • Generally, I would just invoice it at about the same price.

  • If I were getting money, I would just have to buy goods with it, so that the goods are the same to me as money.

  • It shall not be long or he be met withal, said Sir Palamides, for I found never no knight in my quest of this glasting beast but, and he would just, I never refused him.

  • And they touched the shield and bad him come out of the pavilion for to just, and he would just.

  • No doubt he would just go away when it began to grow dull in Murkley, and be seen no more.

  • I thought I would just look at it all, and admire it; but you could not do that, you had just to take your part, as if you had been at home.

  • Mr. Chairman, I would just like to say Mr. Thorne has been very helpful.

  • No, I would just like to thank the witness for his cooperation.

  • Mr. Chairman, I have to go to a meeting at the Speaker's office momentarily, I would just like to ask one further question of this witness.

  • I would just like to know if you are familiar with it.

  • I would just like to ask a question about this letter I am just glancing over.

  • I would just like to conclude on this note.

  • But when the farmer who owned the turnips rose, he felt uneasy in his mind, and thought he would just go and take a look at his turnips on the Sunday morning.

  • He would just say he wished the old dame would stay and keep house for him a day or two, and then he would take the lad out with him up the hill to quarry corner-stones, and roll down a great rock on him.

  • So I said it wouldn't be no use to try to play it any longer, and I would just make a clean breast and tell her everything, but she musn't go back on her promise.

  • He said she would slap down a line, and if she couldn't find anything to rhyme with it would just scratch it out and slap down another one, and go ahead.

  • I WOULD just like to know how they're putting in their opportunity.

  • I would just have to estimate it--I would say it was 12 to 15 feet.

  • No; I would just have to come back down here.

  • I said he would just have to wait downstairs, and they did.

  • The only thing on that that I could say definitely was that there were people there, and as to how many, it would just be next to impossible to say.

  • He would just as soon have thought of publishing a scurrilous libel about those whom he loved best, as of allowing their names to be paraded for the world's amusement and criticism.

  • As for going out for a real wild day after partridges, or walking a quaking bog after snipe, or waiting for ducks at "flight time," he would just as soon have thought of climbing the Schreckhorn.

  • I would just love to go the rounds with her," declared Tavia, "if you did not insist upon going right to work.

  • You could never wear anything that would become you more than a simple sailor," said Dorothy, with the air of one in authority, "and if I had your short locks I would just sport a jaunty little felt sailor all summer.

  • And then I thought I would just wait a wee minute longer.

  • I would just have to play her easy and try to find out what it was.

  • I would just as soon take my chance with a fresh broken broncho as with one that has been ridden before.

  • So if that would suit you it would just suit me.

  • I would just as soon have one as the other.

  • I would just as soon be doing that as lying here," the boy said.

  • I would just like to find a foot of snow on the ground, right down to the edge of the loch; and the flakes falling so thick ye couldna see a dozen yards ahead of ye.

  • I don't want to be drawn into it any more than I can help; I mean, I would just hate to write to him direct and ask him for a particular favour; but this is a very little one, and you know him as well as any of us.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "would just" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    mulberry trees; solid matter; then take; would accept; would answer; would become; would bring; would deliver; would enable; would find; would have been impossible; would have been very; would hold; would mean; would otherwise; would pass; would permit; would propose; would prove; would ride; would sometimes; would still; would suggest; would surely; would tend; would write