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

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1 We 'll soon be able to plant the er radishes leeks and spring onions .
2 Operation Gauntlet was the culmination of months of work — now detectives hope they 'll soon be able to return the property , which includes everything from caravans to jewellery , to its rightful owners .
3 Erm , to the kind of soul that I have right now erm , drag that out of my body erm , make sure that it 's the same soul that I started with , drop it into some other body and you 'll still be able to tell the story that I , still me , am now in a different body .
4 The steam rally at Upton runs over the weekend , and forty thousand visitors are expected to come and see the vintage traction engines , old time fairground and other attractions.And they 'll also be able to admire the fastest steamroller in the west .
5 Basically when you see ‘ Capcom ’ appear on your screen at the start , press Down , R , Up , L , Y , B and after a few seconds you 'll both be able to choose the same character .
6 You 'll often be able to turn the pension your contributions have brought into a bigger tax-free lump sum .
7 They 're now being taken in Iraqi buses to Baghdad and are expected here in the early hours of the morning , the authorities say they 'll then be free to leave the country .
8 The British women and children seized in Kuwait yesterday while trying to join a convoy to Baghdad , are now being transported in a fleet of buses to the Iraqi capital ; authorities say they 'll then be free to leave the country .
9 Best you stay with me till we get to Argyle Street-you 'll no be able to miss the station then . ’
10 The scientists at Wallingford know they 'll never be able to tame the sea but they hope their new wave basin will help them find ways of making its effects less destructive .
11 She 'll never be able to play the piano —
12 ‘ — We 'll never be able to afford the rent . ’
13 Steps cut into the patio or terrace are not difficult to construct if the ground is firm , as it will only be necessary to cut the step shape into the hard earth .
14 Then you will only be liable to pay the present excess , even if the rate has gone up when you claim later .
15 The purchaser will only be willing to pay the price originally agreed if the forecast renewal rate is achieved .
16 The Pentium is , of course , a 64-bit processor and the Dell has a 32-bit motherboard , so it will only be able to take the speed-doubled OverDrive version .
17 The adventurers will only be able to search the place if they destroy Stanislav , who will protect his work-place to the bitter end .
18 Whilst researchers will only be able to specify the ways in which large-scale social and economic restructuring has led to particular types of local political practice through empirical study , we can claim that there has been an increase in local political activity , in contrast to the relatively homogeneous picture presented in the 1950s and early '60s .
19 They 're all under twelve weeks old , so they will only be able to have the measles and Parvo injection .
20 People on legal aid will only be able to get the most inexperienced lawyers to work for them if a plan to set fixed hourly rates goes ahead , the Law Society warns .
21 The former INLA woman and UDA man will only be able to cut the cake — a meagre one-tier affair supplied by the authorities — with a plastic knife .
22 Without having enough knowledge to judge its magnitude , I can foresee a real problem for the Director of Public Prosecutions and her ancillary services if they are to be expected to join in applications or to provide undertakings or letters for the purpose of facilitating parties in complex civil proceedings who will naturally be anxious to achieve the maximum disclosure by their opponents .
23 Readers of earlier chapters will already be prepared to find the answer in the theory of evolutionarily stable strategies .
24 It will normally be reasonable to ask the Policyholder to bear such a proportion as may seem fair up to one-third off the replacement cost when the sails , spars , standing and running rigging are over two years old .
25 Parties to commercial contracts tend not to terminate the contract even in cases of breach of condition , but will normally be happy to allow the other party to make good any breach .
26 You will normally be able to claim the amount ( net of tax and National Insurance ) that you would have earned between the date of dismissal and the date of the industrial tribunal hearing .
27 Otherwise it might decide to nationalise the foreign firm 's assets on its soil knowing that the company will just be able to claim the compensation anyway .
28 In view of the distributed nature of a transmission line , to determine its behaviour it will generally be necessary to consider the response of an infinitesimal element of it .
29 It will generally be politic to avoid the antipathy of these readers by eschewing forms such as ‘ different to ’ , ‘ less people ’ and ‘ the most numerous sex ’ .
30 It will thus be possible to measure the effectiveness , in terms of cost per job , of the various schemes of aid .
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