Example sentences of "will [adv] have [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'll just have a wee bit go down and get something |
2 | I think perhaps I 'll just have a little bit of water I 'm very thirsty , I know I have n't |
3 | When I ask for a carrot now mummy I , I 'll just have a big feast . |
4 | Grab a chair then , we 'll just have a quick debrief and then we 'll break for lunch . |
5 | I 'll just have a quick word with your dad . |
6 | I 'll just have a quick look now … |
7 | about we 're probably due to finish , well we 'll just have a quick look at this . |
8 | Erm I did say we 'll just have a quick mention punctuation before we look at the maths . |
9 | " And while you 're there , " said Bigwig , scowling round at the others from under the great sheaf of fur on his head , " I 'll just have a few words with these three . |
10 | I 'll soon have a nice meal ready for you … ’ |
11 | Get a second hand car for a couple of grand and er I 'll still have a little bit . |
12 | You 'll still have the same trouble . |
13 | ‘ I 'll always have a soft spot for Wigan , my memories of 1984-85 are priceless , ’ Ferguson said . |
14 | So I said erm if we say increase to five pounds now , they do n't have to , but it means that they 'll probably have a significant unit holding , you know , to compensate them . |
15 | I mean in other words we 'll now have a proper strategy the Vale of the White Horse , which was always an area of the county where the County Council services to the elderly was poorer than elsewhere . |
16 | If something happens in the work you 'll maybe have a social occasion , to celebrate somebody 's retirement . |
17 | He used it to attack paternalistic officialdom and to articulate demands for social progress : ‘ I 'd tell people to forget their old ordinary life because ultimately , anyhow , we 'll either have a better life than that , or bust . ’ |
18 | When we 're doing first aid incidents erm the standard thing we 're doing for adults when they 're doing a first aid exam is we 'll give present them with a casualty with perhaps a cut hand or something like that and they 'll actually have a black eye . |
19 | Want to sing with a high pitched voice , you 'll never have a better chance . |
20 | and prove our Thomas wrong , he says I 'll never have a decent car . |
21 | ‘ She 'll never have a fat arse , ’ said Belinda . |
22 | The faunas and/or floras of these two formations are likely to be different for purely ecological or preservational reasons ( in fact the lower formation in this case , having been metamorphosed , will presumably have no recognisable fossils anyway ) . |
23 | Fortunately , all of these alterations are only temporary and your strength of character in completing the London Marathon will eventually have a positive impact on your fitness . |
24 | Because of the small number of women completing 24 cycles or more the suggestion in our data that both groups will eventually have the same pregnancy rate , must be interpreted with caution . |
25 | As for the second part of my hon. Friend 's supplementary question , I can not anticipate entirely what will happen , but the reduction in mortgage interest rates will obviously have a beneficial effect . |
26 | Recent developments in the area of financial services will obviously have a major impact on this . |
27 | The way in which a product is marketed will obviously have a great impact upon the public 's expectation . |
28 | The new Bank of European Reconstruction and Development will obviously have an important role in deciding policy when its opens its doors for business . |
29 | Clearly , local authorities will only have a limited amount of money to spend as opposed to Government support , which is at present guaranteed . ’ |
30 | Working on the basis that there is a finite number of hill walkers , and I believe that to be the case , then spreading the load will only have a good effect on the more popular hills — some of which are showing signs of over-use . |