Example sentences of "will have [verb] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 By this stage the sap in the vine will have withdrawn into the roots .
2 ANYONE who has watched Carol Vorderman on the quiz show Countdown will have marvelled at the speed of her mathematical brain .
3 ‘ Ladies and gentlemen , I must apologise for dragging you in here at such short notice , but as you will have guessed from the Meeting Notice the urgency … ’
4 By morning it will have moved towards the part of my body that needs healing . ’
5 If someone wants to make a move on Morgan , the would-be predator will have to move before the Willis Faber meeting .
6 Labour will now be on the line they will have to deal with the axe grinders instead of helping them to sharpen their axes and the difference between ourselves and Mr and I have great respect for Mr and I believe his attempt to keep the debate about the future of Highfields and Moat on a rational basis has been very positive but completely unsuccessful and I believe now that we have to look for a way forward .
7 ‘ I 've no doubt of that but you will have to deal with the family or with their solicitor .
8 You will have noted from the Brintons extract on page 106 that some English texts make little or no use of conjunctions .
9 You also need to bear in mind that you may have other payments under existing deeds of covenant or other payments made under Gift Aid in the same tax year , and you will need to have a taxable income at least equal to the gross amount of all these payment , as well as the Gift Aid payment being contemplated , otherwise you will have to account to the Revenue for some tax .
10 If a coherent theory of literacy is to be developed , it will have to account for the place of written language , both in relation to the forms of spoken language and also in relation to the communicative functions served by different types of language in different social settings .
11 You may be lucky and find a router bit to reproduce the original moulded sections ; more likely you will have to resort to the scratch-stock .
12 Many people will have heard of the Bloxham Tapes .
13 Certainly most members of the general public will have heard of the Draize test for detecting the irritant potential of cosmetics , or perhaps the more widely used LD50 , nor will they have been spared photographs of immobilised creatures in plaintive lines .
14 BY NOW employees will have heard of the proposals in the White Paper on local government reform .
15 Colleagues , as , as conference will have heard from the mover of motion three , motion six , not prepared to withdraw and the C E C is therefore asking you to oppose both .
16 The right hon. Gentleman and I will have to disagree about the difficulties that those galleries face .
17 Otherwise , despite the rubble around him , he will have emerged from the war as an Arab hero , the man who took on and defied the Zionists , westerners and other infidels , and who will inevitably try to do it all again .
18 Today , the result of our labours was several long rows of planted saplings which , in ten years ' time , will have grown into a grove of pussy willows doing useful service as a screen for walkers .
19 Second , executive power will have grown at the expense of parliamentary power .
20 Governors who are committed to the cause of special education will have to bid for a share of resources in competition with the advocates of other areas of the curriculum who will be pressing their case with equal vigour .
21 Corporate members , which they want to admit next year alongside names trading with unlimited liability , will have to bid for a place — the price being a levy to Lloyd 's central fund .
22 Those seen in the spring will have hibernated over the winter in garden sheds or hollow trees .
23 You will have noticed in the circulars that we have launched our first theme — Customer Service ( circular AD/93/105 ) .
24 The little lizard will have scuttled across the beach during the middle of December and man did not appear until the evening of 31 December .
25 At the extremes , people will have to choose between the values of the Nazis and those of Moses — that is , racism or an appreciation of equal human rights .
26 In the society they inhabit they will have to choose at the university level between physics and hi-tech ; philosophy and literature may be pursued only as hobbies .
27 ‘ One of us will have to sleep in the car . ’
28 Only time can tell how news media will have to adapt to the demands which loom ahead , but that 's little comfort to an organisation plagued with financial problems and worries .
29 By the time we are allowed to vote again , education , public transport and the welfare state will have been reconstructed along the two-track lines of the NHS , and broadcasting will have succumbed to the brutalism of David Mellor .
30 We will have to go to the Lake District my darling .
  Next page