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

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1 Other television tie-ins due to appear later this year are the Channel 4 Garden Club book , by Arthur Taylor and Roy Lancaster ( Sidgwick & Jackson , April , £14.99 , 0 283 06153 7 ) — virtually the transcripts of the series — and Stefan Buczacki 's Bazaar : The Budget Gardening Year ( BBC , June , £4.99 , 0 563 36779 2 ) , a garden calendar whose puzzling title will presumably be explained by the series of that name starting in July .
2 Such differing criteria as these will presumably be used for the purpose of assessing the course-work component of the examinations as well as the final papers .
3 After burning in the Indomalesian region , grasses appear and , if these are left without grazing or burning , will slowly be replaced by the forest .
4 If the costs of injury are great , the advantages of aggression will eventually be limited by the risks of injury .
5 In 1989 , both IBM and Microsoft issued major endorsements of DVI , suggesting that DVI processing architecture will eventually be integrated into the next generation of desktop computers and their operating systems .
6 Unless the table is made excessively large , two or more different values will eventually be sent to the same slot .
7 It may be that the programmes will eventually be adopted at the Research Council in June but this is far from certain .
8 The other end of the airline will be attached to an airpump , which in an ideal world , will eventually be positioned above the tank 's water level to prevent syphoning back if the pump fails or is switched off .
9 With only a degree of oversimplification , his general conclusion can be summarised as saying that whatever is happening in the built environment will eventually be resolved to the benefit of the undifferentiated interests of capital in general , even if that resolution generates further problems that have to be resolved in turn .
10 This means that the non-digestible calories in the plant cell walls , which will eventually be expelled in the faeces , have already been subtracted in order to give a realistic calorie figure for each carbohydrate food .
11 The centres , which will eventually be opened throughout the country , were the idea of the Princess herself .
12 After being exhibited in front of the European Pavilion in Seville at Expo ‘ 92 , it will eventually be located in the European Parliament in Strasbourg .
13 The bridge , owned and protected by English Heritage , will eventually be rebuilt with the original stones , once they 've been recovered from the river bed .
14 These ‘ debt-equity swaps ’ merely push the debtor-country 's financial problems into the future because profits from the purchased companies will eventually be remitted to the North .
15 These genes are the mechanism by which information arriving at the cell nucleus is translated into instructions for the later synthesis of key structural proteins — that is , proteins which will eventually be inserted into the synaptic membrane so as to change its structure and shape .
16 The downward arpeggio in the last two bars will obviously be given to the clarinet , for besides the fact that it fits that instrument like a glove , it does not lie within the range of any other wind instrument .
17 In deciding " public policy " , he will obviously be influenced by the outlook of the political party of which he is a member , and by the values of the profession which he leads .
18 The cash figure in the balance sheet might include both capital and operating cash : if a debenture is issued but the resulting cash has not yet been invested in fixed assets , then the cash will perhaps be shown in the cash book — this is capital cash ; if profits were made in the current year , some of these profits might take the form of cash — this is operating cash .
19 Industry will especially be looking to the polytechnics to provide a further and much needed stimulus to innovations already taking place in higher education ; in particular , in the development of mixed degree courses , modular courses coupled with practical experience , and of the sandwich system of education and training generally , and in the opening up of opportunities for women in all branches of higher education , not least science and technology .
20 An agreement will only be regulated by the 1974 Act if it is not exempt .
21 Where the departure follows upon some dispute , on the other hand , there will be a natural inclination to enforce the restrictions in full , but it should be remembered that they will only be binding upon the outgoing partner himself , not on third parties .
22 The European Council considers that the presidency 's draft forms the basis for the continuation of negotiations … on the understanding that final agreement by the member states will only be given to the treaty as a whole .
23 Rehearsal time for the cast would be limited , just a few days together in a church hall with sticky tape on the floor and a few odd props to suggest sets that will only be seen on the Friday .
24 The competition is open to readers of 'Small Gardens ' and entries will only be accepted on the entry coupon provided .
25 In relation , however , to " a covenanted payment to charity " ( as defined in TA 1988 , s660(3) ) the amount will only be treated as the income of the person making the payments if the period for the payments can not exceed three years ( TA 1988 , s660(2) ) .
26 Clearly , the r.m.s. value will only be displayed by the type of system under discussion , even for a sinusoidal input waveform , as long as the amplitude of the input remains sufficiently large in relationship to the forward potential drop across the diodes .
27 However , those who operate the law are well aware that it will only be respected to the extent that it conforms with public opinion : the reason why journalists and broadcasters are not prosecuted much more often for undoubted infringements of the letter of the laws of contempt and official secrecy is simply that the authorities are well aware that up-to-the-hilt enforcement of these vague laws would bring the law into further disrepute , and precipitate precisely the sort of clash between government and the press that it has been the British genius to avoid , whenever possible , by cosy arrangements .
28 Deductions from wages paid to operatives such as PAYE , national insurance , superannuation or court orders for maintenance will only be processed through the financial accounts .
29 Prepayments and other assets will only be carried in the balance sheet to the extent that their recoverability in the business can reasonably and prudently foreseen .
30 In this case your details will only be held on the confidential Register .
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