Example sentences of "will go [adv prt] in [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'll go over in June . |
2 | Or it 'll go out in July God knows how we 're gon na do it after SATS in er a a ye at year fourteen . |
3 | The tapes and conversation details will all become completely anonymous no one will know who 's used the words or whose voice are on the tapes together they will provide a permanent record of how the English language is spoken in the nineteen nineties we 'll go down in posterity , eh ? |
4 | Oil will go up in price again . |
5 | ‘ Matron will go up in smoke if he does n't . ’ |
6 | ‘ Yes , well luckily for me , Cozy Powell and Neil Murray are into it and we will go out in November and do some gigs . |
7 | He was the husband of the first woman Prime Minister , but he will go down in history as a wise adviser and a kind man . |
8 | The meeting was chaired by Betty Sinclair , who reminded the supporters that their objective was to demonstrate for civil rights , for jobs and for houses : ‘ We are asking you to listen to the speakers , and what we have done today will go down in history and in this way we will be more effective in showing the world that we are a peaceful people asking for our civil rights in an orderly manner . ' |
9 | Scotland 's 1954 World Cup team will go down in history as one of the most disastrous and ill-prepared rabble that has ever represented the country abroad . |
10 | The 1978 World Cup campaign in Argentina will go down in history as the absolute nadir of Scottish football . |
11 | One of Scotland 's smallest ever keepers , the diminutive Rangers and Third Lanark custodian Jocky Robertson , will go down in history as a scapegoat with a sore head . |
12 | WITH any luck , 1992 will go down in history as the year in which a large proportion of the British people finally recognised the monarchy for the anachronism it has undoubtedly become . |
13 | Paul Piana 's presentation of the first free ascent of the Salathe Wall on E1 Cap will go down in history as one of the best ever . |
14 | He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt . |
15 | He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside the other greats . |
16 | He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt . |
17 | He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt . |
18 | Lewis , 31 , went on : ‘ Linford 's name will go down in history as a well-deserved Olympic title-holder . |
19 | Tanjug , the Belgrade news agency which reflects official thinking in Serbia , reacted to the Washington agreement by crowing that ‘ Bosnia will go down in history as a state that never existed . ’ |
20 | The war between the United States and Vietnam will go down in history as , if nothing else , the first instance of modern technology being used deliberately to destroy a country 's ecosystem . |
21 | This Minister will go down in history as the Minister who killed off small shops in Britain . |
22 | They have a great deal of love and affection for the small stores , and the Minister will go down in history as the woman who wrecked them . |
23 | Nevertheless , Field Marshal Montgomery clinched to top prize to ensure that their name will go down in piping history as the only band to finish a season victorious in every contest . |