Example sentences of "will [adv] [be] " in BNC.

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1 Only clients who have specialist problems will come to bureaux and all those with less than ‘ two-hour ’ problems will effectively be shut out .
2 Others outside county hall also need to appreciate that many LEAs will effectively be managing parallel systems : not all schools will receive full delegated powers for several years to come .
3 They do not officially vote for the president until December 14 but , as they follow the will of their states , the result will effectively be known after today 's election .
4 As a result , there will effectively be fewer PhD students .
5 The theory goes something like this : as long as a country can continue to borrow money , it will effectively be able to ‘ roll over ’ its debt indefinitely .
6 But unless there s a change of plan , by the summer of next year the base will effectively be deserted .
7 The date was pencilled in during the summer , but the tourists , who will effectively be a near Springbok side , wanted a Saturday fixture .
8 And we ourselves will instinctively be perceived as ‘ anti-Christian ’ , as writers engaged in a fully fledged crusade which pits us , as militant adversaries , against the ecclesiastical establishment — as if we were personally bent on toppling the edifice of Christendom ( and so naive as to think such a feat possible ) .
9 If this project falls , it is not for purely logical reasons ; it will rather be for the more interesting reason that the right sort of truths do not exist about human nature .
10 Such differing criteria as these will presumably be used for the purpose of assessing the course-work component of the examinations as well as the final papers .
11 He will presumably be picked out on his course-work .
12 The repertoire of transactions in which teachers engage their pupils when teaching X depends , among other things , on the nature of X and on the mental picture of the pupils ' developmental path held by the teacher ; the teaching will presumably be , in the teacher s eyes , consistent with these factors and at some levels , demonstratively effective .
13 Other television tie-ins due to appear later this year are the Channel 4 Garden Club book , by Arthur Taylor and Roy Lancaster ( Sidgwick & Jackson , April , £14.99 , 0 283 06153 7 ) — virtually the transcripts of the series — and Stefan Buczacki 's Bazaar : The Budget Gardening Year ( BBC , June , £4.99 , 0 563 36779 2 ) , a garden calendar whose puzzling title will presumably be explained by the series of that name starting in July .
14 Calculating any extra resource using an index based on doctors ' own perceptions of what creates work seems the more valid approach as these will presumably be factors deterring doctors from working in underprivileged areas or causing them to limit access so as to avoid overwork .
15 If these observers are correct then the FMI 's future development will presumably be secured from within by a civil service committed to bringing about ‘ lasting reforms ’ .
16 It is intended that this system , which will presumably be the basis for pool allocations for some years to come , will be refined during the next few years as it works out in practice .
17 If the regional scheme is successful , it will presumably be extended to other parts of the country , in which case it will do much to increase the viability of the Dip.HE , though , of course , its implications go well beyond it , potentially to embrace the whole field of recurrent education .
18 However , it will presumably be rare that a business can be held not to be acting in the course of business if it sells goods on its standard terms .
19 If you do , you will assuredly be severely handled at the trial and it is not unlikely your evidence will be disbelieved .
20 Fail to control your work boundaries and you will assuredly be on the receiving end , like Margaret , of endless inappropriate delegation , buck passing and management by inertia .
21 Characteristic qualities of a step are likely to be retained because the type of music so decrees , although it will rarely be identical in its performance because it will have been refurbished .
22 Technical confirmatory tests can be applied to prove cleanliness although they will rarely be used unless determining the relative performance of cleaning agents , or , perhaps , in judging a competition :
23 Standards of typography will rarely be a decisive factor in selection , but there is no doubt that small print is disliked by many readers — including those with good eyesight — and should be avoided on the relatively rare occasions that alternatives are available ( for instance , with the different editions of popular classics , or with light fiction , where the choice is very wide and content is less variable ) .
24 This site will rarely be found in books on ‘ industrial archaeology ’ , which usually show scant interest in agriculture .
25 In the care of the very old people living in independent households , informal systems will rarely be wholly sufficient .
26 Having said all this , if your home is centrally-heated , one heater , perhaps not even rated for so large a tank , should suffice , and in practice it will rarely be on , when your home heating is .
27 It will rarely be the case that either an animal or a human will be provided with the opportunity to mate with an absolutely ideal member of the opposite sex .
28 Some guillemots and razorbills will have stayed in inshore waters during the winter , and will even roost on breeding ledges early in the year , but puffins will rarely be seen inshore until late April .
29 Any thought in his mind of trying to protect a good score will rarely be successful ; he must meet the challenge squarely or drop shots .
30 District councils at present will rarely be able to afford to replace such houses , and , if all or most of the houses in a small village are sold , then the council 's ability to meet housing need locally is effectively negated .
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