Example sentences of "will [verb] [prep] [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If we switch off the voltage the current will disappear after some delay .
2 In my experience , the teams will throw in any ball they land their hands on — no-one really knows whether it is the playing ball or not .
3 SAS is n't religious , he says and will port to any volume platform whenever it is able to .
4 Chairman James McAdam said that of the current 140 Ratners shops , no more than 60 will exist by this time next year .
5 It talks about the confident assumption that life on earth will exist in some form however much we manage to foul things up for our own species and those close to us .
6 It 's happiest in large shoals , and will adapt to most water conditions , providing the filtration and maintenance is correct .
7 Prima facie , therefore , a charge to capital gains tax will arise on any transfer by the husband to the wife of the former matrimonial home or of his share or interest in it .
8 When the anxiety upper limit is reached it will remain at this level for a certain time .
9 ‘ She is in a vegetative state and the prognosis is that she will remain in that condition for up to 25 years , ’ said Mr Hodson .
10 The cuttings will remain in this position until the following autumn — 12 months — during which period you will need to keep an eye on them for pest and disease and , of course , include them in your routine precautionary spraying and care .
11 They will cock to their maximum at the start if the downswing and if no effort is made to make the clubhead catch up , they will remain in this position through impact .
12 Accountability will remain in this place because the Secretary of State will be accountable to the House for the exercise of his duties in the provision of further education .
13 They can calculate not only how much business I 'm doing but exactly how much money they will make on each piece of business .
14 But see the difficulties the riders will make for each other .
15 The fact is , transition to the simpler rules will involve costs , though at the end of the day it will make for more cost effective regulation than the present encyclopedias . ’
16 Sitting at right-angles to them ( on either side of the corner of a table ) or even alongside them will make for more harmony .
17 We have to take account of that article and ask what difference the Bill will make in this respect .
18 And that 's , that will build on that foundation .
19 The introduction of the national curriculum and schemes for the local management of schools will build on that framework and bring about further improvements in provision for such children , not just in primary schools but throughout the state system .
20 It is to be hoped that the Secretary of State , when he sets up the national appraisal arrangements to which he is committed , will build on this goodwill .
21 Local mineral plans will build on this framework with more site-specific proposals .
22 It does not include the scientific , which it ought to do — it is hoped that schools will build in this element for themselves … the original teams of teachers who came together to build the project did not include a scientist … ( ibid . ) .
23 In the evenings they will socialise with another Ski Club party for early intermediates and swap notes and jokes .
24 This is an issue which Western Governments and unions are only really beginning to grapple with in the context of the Single European market , and for many that is where the debate will stay for some time .
25 The core will stay for some time .
26 Inflationary expectations will be revised upwards , eventually to 4 per cent according to Friedman , and the appropriate Phillips curve will shift upwards to curve B. As it does so , unemployment rises back to the NUP and the economy moves to point F. At this point , the actual and expected rates of inflation are 4 per cent , and inflation will stay at this rate so long as the new money supply growth rate is maintained .
27 Systems will simply not change as easily as Shapland and Hobbs seem to hope ; for police society is extremely conservative and masculine in outlook , and has long reflected the low esteem women are given in wider society , as I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4 .
28 To illustrate this I will describe in some detail the example of my own school , where the governing body has grasped the opportunity presented by recent legislation to formalise a long-established tradition of teacher involvement in decision-making .
29 That is because it demonstrates how poorly British farmers co-operate to sell their products — I hope that my right hon. Friend 's marketing grants will assist with that problem — and spells out in words of one syllable that the British farmer will not be discriminated against in Europe .
30 A strong image will assist in this identification , although it can act negatively as well as positively .
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