Example sentences of "will [adv] [verb] into [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 During the designing , for example , you 'll probably come into contact with architects , surveyors and other consultants .
2 In most cases the quotation will also state that the sending back by the buyer of an acceptance of the quotation will not automatically result in a contract ; a contract will only come into existence upon acceptance of the order by the seller .
3 It is , I think , also of interest to note that section 84 will normally come into play for the benefit of a defendant to action already begun by the local authority in the county court .
4 If a tough , pushy Orc grows fast he will soon come into conflict with an established equally big Orc .
5 The cassette housing with the controls ( rec , play , FF etc. ) underneath is set out as you 'd expect to find on any conventional 2-track recorder , except that additional control buttons will also come into play for recording , monitoring , rehearsing , dropping in etc .
6 The provisions of ss15 and 16 of the Partnership Act will also come into play in connection with the matters presently under discussion : 15 An admission or representation made by any partner concerning the partnership affairs , and in the ordinary course of its business , is evidence against the firm .
7 The laws , which are expected to pass easily through federal and state parliaments , will also come into force on July 1 next year .
8 The other departments will inevitably come into conflict with marketing from time to time because the latter 's need to satisfy customers requires an adaptability that does not fit into their drive for efficiency of operations .
9 THE Government will today fall into line with the European Community 's proposed Social Charter when the right of workers to belong — as well as not to belong — to a trade union is enshrined in its Employment Bill .
10 Malone will again go into action without scrum-half Stephen Cowan .
11 The question of Germany 's frontiers , still unsettled today as a matter of strict international law , will likewise fall into place as part of any new arrangement in Central Europe .
12 ‘ True ’ workers ' control will never spring into existence in fully fledged form and socialists must fight , within the present society , for democratic measures which can help to ‘ de-mystify ’ management and raise radical questions concerning the organisation of work and the goals of production , whether these measures involve the accountability of managerial agents or the promotion of workers ' plans .
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