Example sentences of "will have to pay [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'll have to pay full fare on Sunday now , both ways .
2 In most cases you have up to 56 days interest-free credit but if you miss the deadline , you 'll have to pay high interest rates of up to 30 per cent .
3 And it may be , that if you have three tellies in the house , you 'll have to pay forty pounds extra .
4 That 's something that erm a great many of the multinationals will er try to get round very er and the other , other thing they 'll have to pay fair price which reflects the cost of production and the quality of the product , plus a margin for investment and development .
5 Well , they 'll have to pay more .
6 The real ale group CAMRA has warned that if the Greene King bid is successful they 'll have to pay another six pence for a pint of their favourite beer .
7 They 'll have to pay another mortgage as well .
8 The government must have the figures , we know the government has the figures and the people of Britain will have to pay that extra tax so why have n't they got the guts to tell them how much they 'll have to pay .
9 Current Account With a Current Account you will have to pay certain charges when you use CheckOver for operating your account .
10 If you want any other benefits , or if you want to stay in SERPS but build on top of it , you will have to pay extra , and make your own arrangements .
11 ‘ It is sure to give dish sales a boost as it will be financed by advertising so no dish owner will have to pay extra for it , ’ says an industry analyst .
12 They worry that Thames 's programmes will go to BSkyB ; or that they will have to pay extortionate prices to stop that happening ; or that Pearson will launch other satellite channels .
13 Normally you will have to pay this fixed amount , even if you get a full rent rebate .
14 The Government has instructed all Local Authorities in the country to prepare registers of everyone in their area who will have to pay this new tax .
15 I mean can I just return to what Queenie Warley said about the rents , because basically what she said was the conservative view on council house rents was that yes they had to go up because the Government decreed they had to go up , that they would have put them up earlier so people would have been paying more for longer , and the phasing that they 're suggesting now what she did n't point out is that under the Conservative proposal people would finish up paying even higher rents than they will have to pay this year .
16 Now they will have to pay more tax for this .
17 When the pound is weak , your standard payment will not be enough to buy the currency , so you will have to pay more and your actual mortgage debt increases .
18 From early next year people using credit cards will have to pay more in some shops than people using money .
19 Soon , the council will have to pay direct .
20 It could cover all your rate payment , but after April 1988 , anyone in receipt of income support and housing benefit will have to pay 20 per cent of their rates .
21 Indeed these two characteristics are all that is needed in the case of the adjective ; the relative clause is in a sense a stalking horse , convenient in that it is more tangible than the relation around which it is built , but unnecessary , and awkward in that it brings with it , in English , the requirement that it must express a tense ; for while it is often possible to read a tense into an adjective there is no reason whatever to suppose that there is always some particular tense present to the mind of the speaker but suppressed , as can be seen from instances like ( 35 ) , where more than one tense could plausibly be grafted onto the sense expressed by the phrase underlined , or , just as well , some adverbial notion like " because " or " if " without any specific tense being implied : ( 35 ) motorists guilty will have to pay heavy fines Likewise , the buildings adjacent of example ( 17 ) simply take their tense from that of the clause as a whole ; if , for instance , we were to switch the tense of the verb in that example in order to shift the whole situation to past time : ( 36 ) the buildings adjacent were closed for three days it would be quite unnecessary to presume that an independent mental re-assignment of tense , from present to past , internal to the phrase buildings adjacent , has to take place as well .
22 If you pay tax at the higher rate , you will have to pay some additional tax and should allow for this in your budgeting , as its deduction is not automatic .
23 If you will have to pay some of the costs yourself , they will send you an AG 3 certificate .
24 As far as we are concerned it may mean that we will have to pay some costs not previously charged to us .
25 If the contract is not frustrated , the buyer will not be entitled to the return of any money and will have to pay any money still outstanding .
26 Is it true that the Army will contribute £10 to each uniform and that officers and others will have to pay any further costs ?
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