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

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1 Members of congress are , in any event , likely to be in awe of the president ; a direct telephone call from him will carry special weight as Tip O'Neill reports : ‘ The men and women in Congress love nothing better than to hear from the head guy .
2 I suspect the left hook with which he floored Ali in their first bout and the controversy aroused when referee Harry Gibbs decided Bugner had outpointed him will remain important entries in British boxing long after the widely-publicised arguments between Eubank and Benn have faded from memory .
3 It was , however , a month or two before they gave up sending me colourful brochures with inducements to have a rose bush planted in his name or an attractively calligraphed entry in their ‘ Book of Remembrance ’ , to be opened every year on the date of his death to commemorate his passing etc , etc , none of which was cheap and I 'm sure that neither I nor anyone else who knew him will need that kind of reminder .
4 He 'll bowl all day and bowl well , as he showed in Manchester .
5 He 'll devote precious time to help Alan the auditor access the department 's accounts .
6 By the end of the afternoon , after a few more pints , he gets involved in a Q&A challenge — he says he 'll answer any question , so long as I keep them coming .
7 He 'll kick that door down in ten minutes . ’
8 Wears he wears white Swiss cotton and he 'll change half way through the day , depending on whether he 's got , you know , in fairly important meetings .
9 But his happy demeanour is n't likely to last , because not only has he got the move to a new premises in Nantes to handle , along with the updating of the 300 coupe and convertibles he 'll build next year to use Renault 's up-and-coming 24-valve V6 , he 's also got the De la Chapelle Parcours in his hands .
10 Perhaps he 'll make some jewellery for you , one day . ’
11 He 'll want certain clothes , certain books .
12 He 'll want proper street lighting instead of our present hit or miss lamps .
13 Hopefully he 'll stay that way . ’
14 ‘ Once he 's up and walking he 'll stay that way , ’ said Mrs Sanderson .
15 ‘ If he said to me , he 'll stay 12 months , he 'll stay 12 months .
16 ‘ If he said to me , he 'll stay 12 months , he 'll stay 12 months .
17 He 'll manage twenty-five miles or so by nightfall , and that will bring him to the stream over there called the Carron , with a dozen miles of forest and boggy ground between himself and the main river-crossing .
18 he 'll eat raw carrot and things like that but otherwise the only vegetables he 'll eat are potatoes he eats
19 He 'll drag this country into the West , as Peter the Great tried to do . ’
20 he 'll ram this steel-sprung Duncan Fearnley down his throat
21 He 'll do daft things , like making all the stag ponies step aside on the path to avoid treading on a slug .
22 Yeah but if we can get him onto the computer system he 'll do two days a week if he can do it
23 And he 'll do all sorts of terrible things .
24 The bookies have been inundated with bets ranging from how he 'll do this afternoon , to er whether he 's likely to become Champion Jockey again .
25 ‘ And if you explain to Thomas that he 's not to touch things like that , but must come and tell you when he finds one , then he 'll avoid any danger in future . ’
26 If we do n't , he 'll overrun all Europe — probably England too . ’
27 He 's been taken to Pentonville Prison where he 'll serve four months .
28 He 'll love that Ange !
29 The Archbishop of Canterbury will now decide if he 'll face disciplinary action .
30 It 'll now run at the same time as his main sentence and means he 'll spend less time in jail .
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