Example sentences of "will [adv] [adv] [vb infin] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Smith favours the view that decisive policing will most effectively quell the rioting , but concedes that premature intervention may well generate uncontrollable panic .
2 In a lecture he delivered on the fringe of last year 's Conservative Party conference , Mr Lawson said : ‘ While economic failure will most certainly drive a government out of office , economic success alone will not ensure that it retains office . ’
3 Reducing their earnings lowers the airline 's cost curves and therefore will most likely cause the airline to reduce its prices .
4 But if one issue is to be singled out as representing a point of potential conflict between partners at this time it will most likely concern the relationship between home and employment .
5 ‘ You will obviously never have the resources to remedy that , ’ Catherine said .
6 If past experience is any guide , the present engines of administration and leadership will only sluggishly meet the pressure of the occasion .
7 The extra cash , however , will only partly soften the impact of the introduction of the poll tax next year .
8 ‘ It will only further complicate the question . ’
9 The contract will somewhat quaintly oblige the seller to unfasten as many assets as possible to make them movable .
10 In that case a shortfall in one instalment will normally only justify a rejection of that one instalment .
11 ‘ The money we 'll get for the house , if we 're lucky enough to sell it at a good price , will just about pay the bills . ’
12 will just about cover the cost of er the motor bike
13 The improvements will not completely bring an end to unpleasant odours from the works , but should still prove good news for the residents of Alton .
14 The seller does not have to agree to this and if he does , that will not normally affect the operation of section 20 .
15 A report will not normally give the name or other identifying details of the complainant or of any person involved in the matter .
16 In Industrial Tribunals , the tribunal will not normally make an award of costs .
17 If a company heading a small group chooses not to take advantage of the exemption from preparing group accounts , its group accounts will not normally contain the auditors ' report required by s 248(3) .
18 Quantum mechanically , however , Heisenberg will not normally allow the electrons to have a well-determined position ( it will usually have to be uncertain ) .
19 A small party may get a substantial number of votes , but if they fall short of the quota it will not normally win a seat .
20 Suppose manufacturer A has for some years produced a razor which will not normally cut the user unless it is slid sideways across the skin .
21 Suppose that in May 1991 manufacturer B markets a razor which is equally efficient but which will not normally cut the user , even when slid sideways .
22 We will not normally discuss the technology out of which the architectures that we describe are to be implemented .
23 Similarly , a child who has language problems because of hearing loss caused by a temporary blockage ( otitis media ) may have her hearing corrected by surgical intervention , but this will not automatically remedy the child 's problems with language ; this will require additional treatment to create the possibility of appropriate learning ( Downs and Blager 1982 ; Quick and Mandell 1983 ; Godowski et al .
24 Awareness and understanding can help but , unless both genuinely have the other 's interests as well as their own at heart , it will not automatically improve the marriage .
25 People will not give up lightly what they have gained under this Government , and they will not easily embrace a creed that has been rejected by so many nations in recent years .
26 The 2300 and 2600 engines as fitted to the SDI cars ‘ 76 to ‘ 87 did not have the best reliability record and will not easily fit a Land Rover .
27 Targetted regional aid will not just help the companies it will bring training oppertunities for tradesmen and managers alike .
28 That will not just include the admission of new partners and the nature of the partnership business ( which in the case of solicitors can not really changeand see ss24(7) and ( 8 ) above ) but will extend to matters of policysetting up new departments to take on types of work not previously accepted or closing departments which have proved unprofitable , opening and closing branch offices , expelling partners , changes to the name of the firm , raising additional capital from the partners themselves or by way of loan , and other matters which one way or another can significantly affect the liabilities of each partner .
29 at the end of the first year will be laughed at , because the value will then be much less — in some cases it will not even cover the commission of the salesman who organised the sale .
30 He claims not only that the parties to the original position will avoid choosing any particular perfectionist principle as a constituent of their doctrine of justice , but that they will not even accept a doctrine of justice including an agreed process for determining which perfectionist principle should be implemented in the state .
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