Example sentences of "will [be] [verb] that [det] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 It will be seen that these copies raise many problems , yet they are an unusually straightforward case .
2 It will be seen that these matters are of importance in both judging and understanding a market economy .
3 It will be seen that these explanations of transmission teaching and its associated connection with teaching quality ( or rather , its lack ) , suggest a very different set of policy implications than those currently in political fashion .
4 Even so , it took great nerve and daring to ride that wind for such a distance and it is a fitting tribute to the bravery of the balloon pioneers , yet it will be seen that those men and women who followed Sadler into the skies display , in their own way , no less daring than he .
5 It will be assumed that all responses can be published unless you indicate otherwise .
6 It will be argued that such factors may have had considerable influence on what are widely believed to have been exclusively ‘ political ’ decisions .
7 It will be recalled that all transfers of property ordered by the court take effect only after the decree absolute ( Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 , s24(3) ) , at which time the exemption relating to a transfer between husband and wife is not applicable .
8 The more natural meaning seems to me to be , ‘ at starting in the profession , ’ for it will be observed that these words are used by the testator in reciting a prior promise made when the testator had not heard of the proposed marriage with Ellen Nicholl , or , so far as appears , heard of any proposed marriage .
9 A key area of the service will be to ensure that all readers are kept up to date on developments in the completion of the internal market .
10 The ref 's job will be to ensure that these guys stay on-side .
11 Thus while labour productivity in terms of gross domestic product per head grew at 1.5 per cent per annum between 1945 and 1951 ( and by 2.5 per cent per annum between 1948 and 1951 ) it will be shown that these gains hardly nibbled at the chronic problems of overmanning in British industry ( Chapters 3 and 5 below ) .
12 ‘ People in the diocese will be devastated that these allegations have been made .
13 It will be appreciated that these decisions within English teaching , as they are seen as likely to affect pupils ' future working and leisure conditions , might be poignantly uncomfortable to resolve for working-class teachers .
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