Example sentences of "will [verb] us [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 She has written a very full report which will assist us with a review of advanced courses policy in the light of the development of general Scottish Vocational Qualifications ( of which more later ) .
2 Then conscience would not so much be a faculty of intuiting truths as a God-given power within us which — if put in control — will steer us in a particular direction , when it comes to choosing between ourselves and others .
3 ‘ This particularly rich pagan cemetery still contains skeletons and grave goods in good condition and will provide us with a wealth of information on the health and culture of the sixth-century inhabitants of Cambridgeshire , ’ Mr Malim said .
4 Many physiologists believe that an exhaustive study of the types of stimuli that increase or decrease the discharge rates of different types of sensory system cell will provide us with a description of how that system works .
5 This together with an improved factory deep cleaning service will provide us with a factory hygiene service , that I am sure will develop into a major business for the division in future years .
6 It will provide us with a great boost , ’ he said .
7 This letter is to confirm our agreement that you will provide us with an authoring program for Reading for English .
8 Like individualism itself , it becomes a claim about the kind of causal factors that will provide us with an understanding of the social world .
9 Incidentally , it will cost us about an extra eight thousand pounds just to do the trial in .
10 We have set very clear targets which will return us to a basic level of performance in the next two years .
11 ‘ Mary , my dear , you will excuse us for a moment .
12 This complete lack of rules will force us into a difficult situation , where the student will have to use his own intuition and aesthetic judgement .
13 Er I hope that now that Anne who is our very capable financial director will enlighten us with a breakdown of costs and an insight into targets with attendant indicators of relative volumes .
14 ‘ Paul will join us in a minute . ’
15 As we are small in numbers we can find it as we go , for maximum flexibility , but I will book us into a lodge for 2 nights on arrival to give us chance to find our feet again .
16 and then that will take us for a period of about probably three months cos we 're saying we 'll done one at least every six weeks .
17 I imagine he is impressed and that he will invite us for a coffee after , but when I look again he is gone .
18 I think that there is a good chance that the study of the early universe and the requirements of mathematical consistency will lead us to a complete unified theory within the lifetime of some of us who are around today , always presuming we do n't blow ourselves up first .
19 [ … ] Our notions of competition and entrepreneurship will lead us to a quite unorthodox view of the nature of monopoly in a market .
20 This in turn will lead us to an examination of how corporate law scholars have sought to offer new ways of legitimating corporate managerial power and how these too prove to be unequal to the task .
21 What we have now is much more than a game : an exciting story to which we do not know the end ; and a visual image which will lead us to an exciting starting point for a drama , an image which we know has engaged the children .
22 The appointment of a specialist of considerable experience and an international reputation in the fields of statistics and taxonomic databases will lead us into a very different situation in the whole area of scientific computing within RBGE .
23 Having tried several adjustments to the system over the past 6 years , I hope this provides a format which will serve us for a good while into the future .
24 It merely hints that the world will be a better place if we support it because the unquantified benefits which will flow from it will put us on a level with Germany and France , assuming of course that we wish to be on a level with Germany and France .
25 Starting with cost reduction any cost reduction programme always involves a lot of redundancy and , and this is no exception and from the slide you 'll see that we 've er we 've had a staff reduction er , from the the plan for this year of one thousand and thirty three er and that 's the , that will save us in a full year something like fifteen point nine , sixteen million pounds .
26 Examining these theories from pragmatics will involve us in a substantial digression from our main concern : which is to account for our intuitions of coherence and thus gain insight into the needs of the language learner , who after all aims to be able to produce coherent discourse , not isolated sentences .
27 And if you will help us with a donation today , I know we can get the action we need .
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