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

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1 However , if weight loss is excessive , then muscle tissue rather than fat tissue is lost , and this in turn will slow down the metabolic rate , making it more difficult to lose weight thereafter .
2 Awards committee chairman Alan Peaford will explain how the 1,275 entries were judged .
3 If rain does n't come soon , there will be no vines or raisins and the desert will swallow up the fertile land .
4 They 're also supremely naive if they do n't think at some point in the future that MCA will hike out a similar compilation to the one Phonogram just have … that 's always assuming that they sort themselves out enough to have the required amount of hits .
5 To the same purpose the president Montesquieu , though I trust too hastily , presages ; that as Rome , Sparta , and Carthage have lost their liberty and perished , so the constitution of England will in time lose its liberty , will perish : it will perish whenever the legislative power shall become more corrupt than the executive .
6 This limits the degree of possible grazing or nibbling and explains why deer and cattle , for example , will eat just a few mouthfuls from each tree before moving on .
7 In particular , the New Moon present in your own birth sign on the 29th will trigger off a new period of some really quite remarkable and reassuring developments in your very personal life .
8 They reach a point where even the smallest stimulus will trigger off a massive reaction .
9 Given a firm 's investment policy , the dividend payout policy it chooses will affect neither the current price of its shares nor the total return to its shareholders .
10 The privatisation will affect only the long-distance element of the network , which is run over lines leased from both British Telecom and Mercury .
11 It will affect about a dozen reactors , all of which are used for research purposes only .
12 He accepts as-if legal rights in that spirit and for reasons of strategy will make mostly the same decisions a conventionalist would make when statutes are plain or precedents crisp and decisive .
13 But MDHC is optimistic it will make up the lost revenue by increased levels of freight .
14 Thus , wherever one looks , one finds people engaged in the construction of the blocks that will make up the Palestinian state .
15 ln this case , the attributes ‘ name ’ and part' will make up the composite key of the ORDER relation .
16 When the Windsor herd arrives in late July they will make up the largest group of African elephants in the country .
17 Bidwell believes that a group of about 50 consultancies will make up the final membership .
18 This contains the pattern of dots that , when printed on paper , will make up the actual character .
19 The four legs and four rails that will make up the seat-jointing section are cut oversize so that they can be cut in half .
20 Nevertheless if the patient is mentally and emotionally unaffected but has , for example , a pain somewhere , then the details of the pain will make up the whole case , or ‘ totality ’ as it is called , for which a similar remedy must be found .
21 Headline is enjoying this lovely writer , but it is his Cornish sagas we are waiting for , which I am told will make up the next book .
22 But it will make only a marginal difference to the stagnant housing market .
23 This is because the profit function before the change must have been horizontal at the optimum , so a small change in the optimum price will make only a marginal difference to the firms ' profits .
24 Its very upsetting in more ways than one and an awkward time for a change of priests so Fr John will want just a little time to settle in and feel at home .
25 That might not be a problem to arable farmers or larger livestock men , but it will rule out the small livestock farm .
26 If you scatter seed on the ground you will build up a substantial clientele of birds such as chaffinches which do not readily come to hanging food and birdtables .
27 The college says the exercise will build up the young people 's confidence and help them to work as a team .
28 The present level of oil tax revenue will build about a million hotel rooms per year , providing really excellent facilities of the standard expected by overseas visitors to our country .
29 We will lighten up the dreary Brighton sky and dim the fluorescent pier . ’
30 This will withstand even a determined attack , as the plastic film will hold even when the glass is cracked .
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