Example sentences of "will have " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They might not be in , Mum will 've gone to the supermarket and Dad 'll have gone back to work .
2 ‘ Mind you , Cal will 've phoned from the villa to find out her results .
3 I feel we will 've achieved significant progress if we have turned , I did n't know you worked in the United Kingdom , into it 's good to know that the rights and needs of children are just as important to you in the United Kingdom as they are overseas .
4 Nurse Kay Hopps will have responsibility for the running of the office .
5 If I ca n't take him he will have a two-hour wait for an ambulance .
6 The length of the covenant will have been specified in the Deed , and it will terminate when the last specified annual payment has been made .
7 If you have dividend or receive bank or building society interest on which tax has been paid , tax will have been deducted at source , and this will enable you to sign a Certificate of Deduction of Tax so that ACET can obtain the advantages of covenant giving .
8 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 .
9 You may in fact find that you do pay some tax in the UK If you have dividends or receive bank or building society interest on which tax has been paid , tax will have beed deducted at source , and this will enable you to sign a Certificate so that ACET can obtain the advantages of the Gift Aid scheme .
10 For the purposes of this book , just two assertions will have to content us : first , some works have been intended by their makers to be seen as art ; second , there is a consensus today that other works are to be described as art .
11 Even if historians are specifically interested in form , it is likely to be the history of forms , or the development of styles which will have attracted their attention .
12 The technical survey is above all a category of book in which the writer will have closely observed the material discussed .
13 It is probable that this will have much to offer .
14 The author has had time to consider and reflect , so that descriptions , interpretations and evaluations will have been carefully formulated .
15 Any compiler of a catalogue raisonné will have seen and compared all the works listed , or will scruple to state if some work has proved inaccessible .
16 A dealer will have chosen his critic with special care for an introduction , an ideal candidate often being a sympathetic friend , perhaps a curator .
17 All the same , museum curators will have carried out a critical task in selecting the exhibition , in some instances having fended off proposals for inclusions with a political or a particular cultural bias .
18 A critic walking for the first time into a gallery may describe a colour in a picture as blue ; it will have been the scrupulous task of a conservator to have established that the particular colour in question was Prussian blue , and thus can not date before the eighteenth century .
19 Some latitude can be allowed to serious critics who write for periodicals which go to press a long time before a show is on view ; these critics will not be able to comment on how the exhibition actually looks , as their articles will have been written before the show 's installation .
20 They nevertheless will have seen some , perhaps all the works included , and can thus comment usefully on the artist 's standing , aims and achievements .
21 A critic unfamiliar with a culture will have trouble in formulating a description of a work .
22 The review predicted that ‘ any eventual mating ’ between Patrick and Jenny ‘ will have something permanently bitter and irresolute about it ’ .
23 This is a progress which has found its haven in the achievements of Mrs Thatcher , and the Patrick of the Eighties will have to deal with that .
24 Of course , if an actor is doing his/her work well , you will have to work really hard to notice all these things — for the effect will be seamless .
25 Being nervous and taking risks are two of the main things you will have to face as an aspiring actor , and that first time you read a play with a group of strangers , rather than in a classroom or among friends is when you confront your first hurdle .
26 The best way to find out about what is available to you more locally is to contact your County Drama Adviser and also the Regional Arts Association for your area , who will have details about part-time training for young actors ( see Appendix A ) .
27 By now you will have made a definite decision to become an actor — no matter what the problems or obstacles .
28 And I will have you and that fault withal ;
29 That is , the employer will have places for a very small number of newcomers to the profession who are not yet union members .
30 If you are fortunate enough to have secured an agent you will have someone with whom you can talk .
  Next page