Example sentences of "will be [vb pp] that [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 If someone is asked a question and replies yes or no it will be understood that the question is now answered and that there is nothing more to be said .
2 In particular , in the attainment of a Learning Outcome such as : ‘ describe a number of responses to a selected major social issue ’ ( L.0.2 — A World of Values ) , it will be understood that the pupil will study the Church 's response ( referring to relevant aspects of the above content areas ) and include mention of the Church 's position as part of his/her Response Item .
3 The state has no role in the appointment of bishops and the juridical processes of church and state are kept entirely separate , though it will be seen that a number of administrative procedures reflect a direct link .
4 It will be seen that the dollar value of exports more than doubled between 1977 and 1981 , but remained fairly stable thereafter , at least until 1986 .
5 It will be seen that the selection difficulty presented by the design in Section 15.2.9 could be removed by randomization .
6 Incidentally , for a circle , that is to say a round hole , it will be seen that the stress concentration factor becomes three .
7 It will be seen that the concept of ahi sā poses problems for Gandhi .
8 It will be seen that the presence of a receiving target explains nothing but it does nudge two previously separate areas of discourse , the mind and the body , into a common sphere .
9 It will be seen that the bulk of the funding for the discount market comes from banking sector institutions .
10 It will be seen that the taking of evidence abroad , which must necessarily be done before the eventual trial and ( unless modern techniques such as video recordings are brought into use ) be reduced to writing , fits more naturally into the written than the oral tradition .
11 It will be seen that the number of combinations of genes in any one cell is enormous and it is from these that the hereditary factors of our physical and mental make-up arise in such great variety .
12 It will be seen that the plaintiff obtained part payment on the second note , the difference between £52.18s.8d. and £100 , i.e. £47.1s.4d , before it was due .
13 Thus From this it will be seen that the impedance between the lead and return at any point , including the input , along an infinite transmission line is the same , namely Z k .
14 At the end of the assessment the client will be reassured that the problem is understandable , and that there is , ‘ light at the end of the tunnel ’ , in terms of a provisional treatment plan .
15 It is of course true that in many cases it will be stated that the nave is , for example , twelfth-century , the chancel fifteenth ( with nineteenth-century restorations ) , the north chapel twentieth , and so on , but it will not record the stained glass now gone or the wall monuments which have decayed ( or , obviously , the changes wrought since the booklet was written ) .
16 It will be noted that no reference has been made to service by post ; the provisions in the Rules of the Supreme Court permitting the use of ‘ ordinary first-class post ’ or service by inserting the writ through the letter-box at the defendant 's address are not applied to service out of the jurisdiction .
17 It will be noted that the day space , to be provided on the basis of 4m2 per person , and including the 2 day patients , mean that a 10-bed sub-section would have a total and an 8-bed sub-section would have a day space of 40m 2 .
18 It will be noted that the date of the commencement of the composition of the work fits nicely with the conclusion reached above about the probable date of Molla Husrev 's departure for Bursa , but it would perhaps be dangerous to draw from el-Kefevi 's assertion the conclusion that Molla Husrev was still in Bursa in 883/1478 .
19 It will be noted that the decision in Papadimitropolous , in which it was held that a victim who mistakenly believed that she was married to the defendant at the time of sexual intercourse nonetheless consented to it , is overruled by the section .
20 It will be noted that the multi-bedroom has a WC and washing compartment with direct access to a lobby for patients ' use while the remaining WC and washing compartments and bathroom should be located so as to be of easy access from the single rooms .
21 However , it will be noted that the list of qualifications under which participation in the intermediate market will not take place is extensive .
22 A reconstruction of the supposed scenery of this time is given in plate 4.4 ( it will be noted that the view is looking west-wards and that the shadows are therefore coming from the north , evidently proving that the British Isles were then in the southern hemisphere ) .
23 If you ask the fire brigade for help in a non-emergency , you will be warned that a cost may be incurred and will be asked to sign a form agreeing to this .
24 It will be assumed that the trader is long in the far contract and short in the near contract ( a bull spread ) .
25 It will be realised that the interpretation of deltas is partly a question of geomorphology , involving form and the use of historical records , but the sediment succession is really only explicable by the detailed methods of Pleistocene stratigraphy .
26 It will be argued that a party should stand by its beliefs : it should not bend with the wind and adopt views that happen to be popular .
27 It will be argued that every event of the war can not be covered in one volume , but it seems strange that Brown saw fit to include a chapter on the making of the film of the Somme .
28 It will be argued that the division of labour does not determine the pattern of pertinent social collectivities but along with certain other factors constitutes a complex grid of social differentiation within which social collectivities may be formed .
29 It will be argued that the decision to put something in other words is essentially a decision about style , a point which is , perhaps , anticipated by Burton-Roberts when he describes loose apposition as a rhetorical device .
30 When we look at the normalisation movement we can see that it has implications for professional approaches , but it will be argued that the concept itself has been open to more than one interpretation leading to differential impact on professional practice .
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