Example sentences of "[noun sg] will [verb] [adj] [prep] a " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 If one suspect confesses and implicates the other , who does not confess , the confessor will go free as a reward for cooperation , while the partner is sent down for the maximum sentence , 10 years .
2 It is believed Oki will lie low for a while then pick another chip and start the process over again .
3 The mode of student attendance is more difficult to forecast , because while a full-time place for study will feature topmost in a candidate 's range of choices , the prospect of getting a job early may provide a stimulus for part-time study .
4 ‘ The hut will stay warm for a while yet , ’ she ventured , despising the timid note in her voice , but powerless to disguise it .
5 ‘ I am not sure that the extra hours will bring in significant extra business , but staff will have to be paid for longer hours and security will become more of a problem .
6 Properly processed and buried nuclear waste will provide less of a pollution risk than the radiation-filled environment which we inhabit at present .
7 How can they hope their asthma will get better in a draughty , poorly insulated flat ?
8 If new information leads to a move in the futures price before the spot price , the basis will change prior to a change in the spot price .
9 A colour will seem brighter on a smooth , hard surface and more muted and darker on a rough , softer surface .
10 If you try to shackle Ian 's natural exuberance , you are taking away one of his biggest strengths and the roving goalscorer will look uncomfortable in a rigid system .
11 Insulating the tank like this will mean your water will stay hot for a longer time , and so should reduce water heating costs .
12 But the long term aim is to make it all dual carriageway … hopes are high the government will announce this in a couple of years .
13 In certain cases , the Government will guarantee most of a loan , which makes it possible for us to lend in circumstances where we would ordinarily not do so .
14 Improved performance will overcome these in a short time .
15 Improved performance will overcome these in a short time .
16 If the pews can be removed without incurring too much damage , a large area of floor space will become available for a range of activities — open-plan office use may be one of the most profitable and least damaging .
17 The glaze will stay shiny for a few days but after a week will begin to lose its gloss , so do n't decorate the cake too early .
18 This uncertainty about lexical identity which is reflected in the acoustic scores , means that , even when a good heuristic estimate is used , an admissible algorithm will proceed breadth-first on a large front .
19 Consequently , the assisted party will not receive the full amount of a money award , the Board retaining sufficient to cover the shortfall , or other property will come subject to a charge , which may be enforced by the Board .
20 This overall field embraces subsidiary or ‘ local ’ fields within the organism and its component parts , and if there is a tendency to contract a disease such as cancer , this tendency will appear first as a ‘ stress ’ in the pre-physical body , later becoming a pathological disease at the cellular level .
21 Okay staying cloudy for most of the day should stay dry patchy fog will form overnight with a little drizzle .
22 Indeed , there 's an excellent description in the seventeenth century by the physician Thomas Willis of an honest and prudent woman , as he describes her , who erm , after much hasty speaking will become mute as a fish , and one might even fancifully look further back and wonder whether this fatiguable weakness was n't something that erm that the Old Testament character , Samson , had .
  Next page