Example sentences of "[noun sg] we will [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 Automated Education Letter in December 1972 reported a talk by R. P. Henderson to the Royal Canadian Institute in Toronto : In the not too distant future we will see the world 's knowledge recorded electronically rather than on the printed page .
2 And , who knows , perhaps one day in the future we will find further evidence from an even earlier date , to take the domestic cat right back to the very beginning of the Neolithic period , some ten thousand years ago .
3 Perhaps because in future we will have a unified Budget , with tax and spending announcements made at the same time , Mr Lamont chose to look further ahead than the 1993–94 financial year .
4 In Darcy 's Utopia we will make do with listening to the radio .
5 In the fund raising and marketing department we will endeavour to strike the right balance between having the most cost- effective membership scheme and safeguarding the needs of our existing members .
6 We do n't think to have the sixty to ninety transport debate yet again , this route remains committed to a policy of reducing the amount we spend on transport because that ultimately benefits our schools and with this in mind we will reintroduce
7 ‘ Tell your countryment we will catch the killers , ’ spokesman Colonel Bill Dennis pleaded yesterday .
8 As a result we will go to bed and get up earlier , and we become more like ‘ larks ’ .
9 Ho however that wo n't be the case for all erm computer programs we use , right , as a result we will need to know how to use er T tables tables and tables .
10 For the first part of the research we will rely primarily on printed government and church documents ; printed material on marriage and the family ( the NMGC has a readily available and fairly comprehensive collection of books and pamphlets published in the 1930s and 1940s ) ; books , reports and ephemera produced by the marital agencies ; and professional journals .
11 For the second part of the research we will rely on the published and unpublished material of the NMGC and on interviews with key informants .
12 ‘ We will learn a lot from our Japanese colleagues and where we can benefit from Japanese methodology we will have no hesitation in adopting it . ’
13 And I think they 're actually picking out a particular area for a report is is not necessarily good practice. , erm I think we can identify er those areas piece by piece we will go through them , they can be brought forward to a variety of areas .
14 Later in this chapter we will meet others .
15 In the first three sections of this chapter we will outline the legal framework and organizational context in which each set of decisions is taken , and will also say something about the decision-makers themselves .
16 In this chapter we will outline the two main schools of Marxist writings — instrumentalist and structuralist — before assessing the overall strengths and weaknesses of this school of thought .
17 In this chapter we will present an analysis of the colliding wave problem using a method that has become familiar in the study of stationary axisymmetric space-times .
18 In this chapter we will examine various explanations of why most soil conservation policies do not work .
19 In the next chapter we will examine in greater detail the statistics on crime .
20 In this chapter we will examine what these statistics show and discuss the extent to which they provide an accurate picture of the range and extent of criminal behaviour .
21 In the last section of this chapter we will examine the attempts that have been made to find out more about the actual extent of crime , and to provide some sort of indication of the ‘ dark figure ’ of crime and to discover the ‘ real ’ rather than the recorded rate and character of crime .
22 Later in this chapter we will examine the gradual growth of government concern to assume a closer control of the process .
23 In this chapter we will examine a third misconception about doubt — the idea that doubt is something to be ashamed of because it is dishonest to believe if you have doubts .
24 In the following chapter we will examine several aspects of their lives and attitudes , some of which are often loosely grouped by historians as " popular culture " .
25 In this chapter we will consider only vacuum solutions .
26 In the rest of this chapter we will consider how state policies have reaffirmed the financial advantages that derive from the continuation of a dual structure of production .
27 In the rest of this chapter we will consider how state policies have reaffirmed the financial advantages that derive from the continuation of a dual structure of production .
28 In this chapter we will consider how social inequalities occur not just between social groups in Britain but also between different areas .
29 In this chapter we will consider the impact of the Conservative 's law and order policies on the crime rates themselves .
30 In this chapter we will look at conflict as a social process ie. between individuals and groups , departments , levels in the hierarchy , or perceived groups in the organisation — ie. ‘ us and them ’ .
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