Women would be paid better if they were stronger, and did not need so much waiting upon in the way of lifting and arranging their work.
Women would have to work in the room with the men, for while the foreman was employed, he would like to keep an eye on the employees.
In every place, women would be found suitable and willing to undertake this profession.
A number of men would be needed to penetrate the wild places of our land; but throughout all the settled portions, women would be found the most effective agents.
But, sir, the Committee tell us that the suffrage of women would be a revolutionary innovation; it would disturb the venerable traditions.
Women would be admitted to all colleges of the land, and to the study of the arts and sciences.
Mr. Lane declared that women were as much entitled to the suffrage as men and that the enfranchisement of women would tend to purify politics.
Governor Edwin Warfield made an eloquent address in which he said: "A man who would not extend a welcome to such a body of women would not be worthy the name of Maryland, which we consider a synonym of hospitality.
If morality were to be made a test, women would do more voting than men.
Women would do their share in the hospitals and elsewhere, and if they were enfranchised, the only difference would be that they would be paid for their services and pensioned at the close of the war.
Mrs. Stanton if women would be willing to go to war if they had the ballot.
Being asked whether the self-acting mules or the spinning by women would be cheapest, he replied that it was hoped the spinning by self-acting mules would be cheapest, as even the women were combining and giving trouble.
To raise the scale of women's wages to the same as men's would probably have meant driving the women from the trade; to leave them on the lower scale would mean that women would contrive to undersell men.
Women would like to go in to look at the papers and so on, but are deterred by the idea that they are not expected, or not wanted, or that their appearance may cause surprise in the minds of their male colleagues.
Things would indeed change, if women would remember at the right time that their role is always that of the party to be entreated, ours that of him who begs for new favors; that, created to grant, they should never offer.
Things would indeed change ifwomen would remember at the right time, that their role is always that of the party to be entreated, ours that of him who begs for new favors; that, created to grant, they should never offer.
I am frank, and I am quite sure that if women would be honest, they would soon confess that they are not a bit more refined than men.
A well-known bookbinder said: "If women would take a fair price for work done it would not be necessary to employ machinery.
As regards the further point whether more women would be employed if they were unprotected by law, the views of representative employers and managers of labour are here set forth.
One employer considered that if stamping machines worked by steam came in women would be employed on them.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "women would" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.