Example sentences of "which will [verb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Pavilion is investing £250,000 in setting up its own sales force , which will go into operation in April .
2 Which will turn into pneumonia and I shall die and nobody will care .
3 The starch of the unripe fruit , which will turn into sugar , is not stored in the flesh but in the stalk and then injected almost overnight .
4 The MP for Fife Central claimed that after subtracting additional Government funds to cover new Scottish Office responsibilities — such as Care in the Community which will come into operation in April and the allocation of teaching and research grants to Scottish universities and higher education institutions — the actual increase was only £130 million in real terms .
5 The suave personal manner and the bleached smile — the style pioneered by Kevin Keegan and currently apotheosized by Gary Lineker — ‘ the totalitarianism of the totally pleasant personality ’ in a phrase of Norman Mailer 's — these have paved the way for the FA 's new cash-rich , super-sanitized super league which will come into being next season .
6 The energy management assistance scheme , which will come into place on 1 April , will grant-aid energy efficiency projects for smaller businesses — a new initiative to add to the many others that my Department already runs .
7 Since the same policy is now given statutory expression in section 34 of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 , which will come into force on 1 October 1992 , he will presumably not seek to depart from this policy in the meantime .
8 This section , which will come into force on 1 October 1992 , introduces a new procedure whereby the prisoner may require the Secretary of State to refer his case to the Parole Board , in certain specified circumstances .
9 The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1992 , which will come into effect on 1 January 1993 , have been laid before Parliament .
10 The disability working allowance scheme , which will come into effect from April , will provide a radical new opportunity for disabled people who can and wish to work .
11 A change in Accounting Standard SSAP 13 , which will come into effect in March 1990 , allows examination of this problem .
12 So far , Britain has been slow to implement a nationwide recycling programme which will take into account all possible methods of re-using raw materials .
13 Can I also say Chairman that there is now a possibility of implementing a semblance of a federated provision er which will take into account and recognise the very important needs of that particular area .
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