Example sentences of "[adv] he will [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 Being a half brother to Rubstic and Kildimo , the further he goes the better he will get . ’
2 I know not how long he will do so .
3 He conducts great concerts , and before long he will make the lame walk — and then he does just a good concert and people are disappointed .
4 Though how long he will stay there is far from certain .
5 I do not know the latest medical prognosis of how long he will live , but perhaps he is hoping not to be around in 30 years ' time when the papers become available .
6 If he stays there too long he will slip into the dirty wind like C , so he must tack off quickly .
7 Although he 's made a series of mistakes in the transfer market only he will decide on his departure from the City Ground .
8 Perhaps he will sit in a class with students five years older than he is .
9 Perhaps he will strike first .
10 Before the right hon. Gentleman goes into overdrive , perhaps he will confirm that , in the past three months , industrial production has fallen faster in Germany , faster in France , faster in the United States and faster in Japan than it has in this country ; and that , if we take the last year as a whole , industrial production fell more in Japan , and more in Germany , than in the United Kingdom .
11 Is it not the case that the Minister perhaps he will confirm this — abstained to allow through an emasculated formula which gave pregnant women in this country the equivalent of sick pay ?
12 Perhaps he will think that here is the smallest point in nature .
13 Sunderland won 2–1 ; perhaps he will think it portentous .
14 Perhaps he will arrive tomorrow . ’
15 If he can not do so , perhaps he will drop me a line .
16 More literally translated that verse runs like this : ‘ I may cover his face with the present that goes before my face ; and afterwards I shall see his face ; perhaps he will lift up my face . ’
17 In response to his anxiety , perhaps he will send me quotations of what he said during the period of the last Labour Government when 30,980 jobs were lost in the mining industry in Wales .
18 Perhaps he will settle for a life on the back benches , cushioned by his massive majority , but it can not be the most exciting prospect in the world .
19 Perhaps he will answer those questions when he replies .
20 If I can give them to him , then perhaps he will leave you out of all this .
21 Perhaps he will tell us whether that is ’ sweatshop ’ investment .
22 In the light of what the right hon. Gentleman has just said , perhaps he will tell us two things : how much extra would he provide for health , and where does health come in Labour 's order of priorities ?
23 Perhaps he will tell his constituents and Government that the submarine-building programme is near to collapse .
24 Perhaps he will find the real truth at last . ’
25 I can not promise a debate on it next week , but perhaps he will find his own opportunities to discuss it in greater detail .
26 Perhaps he will read this .
27 Perhaps he will provide privy information which will explain it all , ’ he observed .
28 Perhaps he will enter university at the age of twelve .
29 We shall be grateful if the Minister can help us on that , but if he can not perhaps he will help us another time .
30 If the right hon. Gentleman wants to swap quotes , perhaps he will listen to what Dr. David Colin Thorne , a Labour party member who stood for Parliament , said on fundholding .
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