Example sentences of "to [pron] [pers pn] will [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 Because any one of these two or three things that I show you is enough if it 's a surprise to them they will blow you out .
2 If you give in to them they will do it even more and they will think they have won , ’ she said .
3 And when you talk to them they will say we can find out whether they 've got a criminal record or not , how can they offer that service in the public domain without having access to your computer ?
4 ‘ Brother , if you will send it to me I will make lots of drawings for you of the Heike , and whatever you want … .
5 I can not stand it any longer , if someone does not come to me I will give up and be miserable for ever and perhaps go home of my own accord , write or wire to Uncle C. and say you are coming at once pleas darling , and come on Saturday or I will give up altogether and always wretched .
6 In contrast , in this case , what is involved is not discriminatory treatment on grounds of nationality but a condition for the grant of nationality , and the member states are free to determine to whom they will grant or refuse their nationality , in the case of natural persons and ships alike .
7 What about the people to whom it will have cost perhaps a third of their lifetime ?
8 This sense of fair play might well be subdued by consideration of Mr Smith 's genocidal tax rate , at least among those to whom it will apply .
9 Well , I 'm just wondering , I 'd like to get some view of what percentage of people to whom you will levy these charges , what per cent of those people will probably be exempt ?
10 Subsequently , the project will focus on possible reforms and examine the extent to which they will alter the distribution of either care or payment for that care .
11 The extent to which they will do so , of course , depends on their personal attraction to the ideals of the Convention and the jurisprudence of its court .
12 Instead they will be made up of a small professional core supplemented by part-timers plus a number of small firms to which they will contract out work .
13 What has to be recognized , though , is that to a large extent , consumers select the stimuli to which they will respond .
14 At a very early stage of growth , the embryos of a fish , a reptile and a mammal may be virtually indistinguishable , but their development proceeds in different directions and the class to which they will belong is defined as soon as they start to acquire more specialized features .
15 As we have seen , the establishment of NAB , with its very strong representation from the local authorities , creates a new environment for the polytechnics , and the colleges and institutes of higher education , to which they will have to adjust for some years to come .
16 If we allow for the expectations of individuals and the values ( valency ) they place on certain outcomes or rewards , then we can propose that the degree to which they will release energy in the pursuit of their goals is a function of their expectations about likely outcomes and the importance they place on those outcomes or rewards :
17 This is a point to which we will return later .
18 This oddity seems most readily explicable in practical terms : probably the heirs of Pamphilus were holding back only on making over the hundred ; as a result only the hundred came into issue ; and because of Scaevola 's proclivity to answering questions concisely ( a point to which we will return ) and ‘ on the facts as stated ’ , the circumstances of the rest of the property were simply left aside .
19 Leaving aside the fact , to which we will return in a moment , that less skilled people can usually be paid less wages than those who are skilled , an important characteristic of craft workers is that they often exercise tight control as an occupation over the job that they do .
20 Of course , middle-class users are also more likely to avoid contact with statutory and voluntary agencies for several reasons ( such as private treatment , or fewer financial problems ) , an important consideration to which we will return in later chapters .
21 This has the advantage from the point of view of the courts of largely relieving them of the necessity to enter into the merits of business judgment , a matter to which we will return below .
22 Undoubtedly the most significant of these in the context of lasers has been that of inhomogeneous broadening , to which we will return .
23 The absence of any figures for turns longer than 60 words after scene six is suggestive of a change in Anderson 's conversational behaviour , to which we will return later .
24 Clearly , this is important and the relationship between the state , civil society and different sections of the working class is one to which we will need to return .
25 There are two main uses to which we will put these concepts .
26 To put the problem in an extreme form , if we had access to all the genetic information in the egg and knew all the genes in detail , could we compute the animal to which it will give rise ?
27 I am worried about the guillotine motion and the extent to which it will inhibit discussion on important matters later .
28 In terms of the political system , it can be said to provide the means by which a government is chosen but , despite the results of the 1983 general election , the extent to which it will continue to be capable of providing a government ( at least in the way it has previously done ) remains under question .
29 The equilibrium solubility of a mineral represents the extent to which it will dissolve in water ; it is usually expressed in ppm ( parts per million by volume ) or .
30 Before writing The First Wives Club , she was an author of children 's books ( and she is not telling who ) ; before that , a marketing executive , a role , she says , which instructed her in the ‘ fear and loathing ’ with which corporate America regards women , and the depths to which it will stoop to deny them equal status .
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