Example sentences of "will [adv] [be] [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 It will perhaps be said that , although there may be no inherent difficulty in establishing criteria of relevance to choices of means , the vagueness of ‘ Be aware ’ for choices of ends reduces it to meaninglessness as our proposed ‘ first principle ’ .
2 When a speaker takes the trouble to use a restrictive relative clause in a noun phrase equipped with a definite article but no attributive adjective , it will naturally be presumed that it is this clause which makes recognition possible ; there is no need for such an assumption when the clause is non-restrictive .
3 True democrats will easily be persuaded that in the absence of an absolute majority for either of the two big parties the pivotal role of a third party is inevitable and salutary .
4 It will thus be seen that the Party is in favour of Electoral Reform being dealt with on a sound basis , but at the proper time .
5 In addition , the existing nurses , who were given undertakings when the trust was set up that their posts would be protected , are now being told that all their jobs are up for re-examination and that anyone seeking extra education will soon be told that someone else is waiting to take her position —
6 No implication will usually be made that reasons should be given ( see Price v Bouch ( 1987 ) 53 P & C R257 ) unless to withhold them would be a breach of good faith , but once reasons are vouchsafed , whether orally or in writing , they will be open to scrutiny by the court .
7 If the traders in a passing-off action operate in different fields of activity , it will usually be assumed that there is less danger of confusion and thus less danger of damage to the plaintiff .
8 The bars of the histogram are arranged in descending order of size and it will usually be found that 80 per cent of the money will be associated with 20 per cent of the products , to a first approximation — the origin of the well-known 80–20 rule .
9 The bars of the histogram are arranged in descending order of size and it will usually be found that 80 per cent of the money will be associated with 20 per cent of the products , to a first approximation — the origin of the well-known 80 — 20 rule .
10 ( e ) Duties generally ( NB Clause 13 ) The matters which would normally be recorded in the partnership agreement under this head include : ( 1 ) the standard form " just and faithful " obligationstrictly unnecessary in view of the overriding nature of the equivalent statutory provisions and the implication that will always be made that such duty exists , but invariably spelled out in writing ; ( 2 ) a requirement that the partners devote themselves to the business of the firm .
11 Whenever the affairs of men are in a sorry state , it will always be found that beyond the immediate manifestations of trouble , there is a root cause .
12 It will quickly be recognised that on matters of fact and challenges to the exercise of discretion leave to apply for judicial review will be refused .
13 It will further be argued that initial teacher training can not be treated as separate from other areas of teacher education and that changes in any one sector will inevitably influence all teacher education provision , initial , probation support and in-service and that in the light of this interdependence , strategies should be established for a coordinated response across the spectrum of teacher education provision .
14 It will further be recalled that the properties of sense-qualifiers and separatives are applied , respectively , to the property of the head noun , and to the relationship between that property and the entity of the noun phrase as a whole ; not to the entity of the noun phrase .
15 Alternatively , strata will later be discovered that appear to fall into the time gap between the two stages .
16 But , as with any archaeological object , such interpretations can be made only when we have a secure idea of when and where a coin was made , and the methods of dating coins and attributing them to mints is therefore discussed first in Chapter 2 , where it will also be seen that the same techniques for dating and attributing coins can sometimes be turned round , using coins to date other objects or to identify places .
17 Mrs Thatcher will also be assured that there will be no unilateral US cuts of its forces committed to Western Europe , that all will be done in consultations with Nato , and that there will be no grandiose new proposal for further US and Soviet troop cuts until the current Conventional Forces in Europe talks in Vienna are complete .
18 It will also be argued that the history of the labour movement , its degree of internal coherence , and its relationship with the state and political parties are significant explanatory factors .
19 It will also be recollected that so many qualifications have been placed upon the decision in The Wagon Mound ( No. 1 ) that the concept of foreseeability is now applied in a very broad and liberal manner and there is unlikely to be much practical difference between an inquiry whether a consequence is foreseeable or natural .
20 It will also be expected that the holder of the post will provide research leadership , and take a particular interest in the School 's graduate programme .
21 Mr MacGregor will also be told that Strathclyde will have to delay road construction contracts unless the Scottish Office cancels its funding reductions .
22 It will probably be understood that I wish to make my remarks in the context of the Scottish agricultural scene .
23 It will probably be found that , for example , detail draughtsmen are required in two or three intensive sessions on each project , between which they would be underemployed .
24 It will now be argued that the topological ‘ fold ’ singularities of regions II and III in the Khan-Penrose solution , are also general features of all colliding plane wave solutions .
25 It will now be seen that the escarpment is the abrupt end of a large plateau culminating in Wild Boar Fell .
26 Suspicions will now be increased that the regiment has been penetrated by a network of loyalist paramilitary supporters and sympathisers .
27 This theory of stages in understanding art is helpful , and it will immediately be realised that the first two stages fit in with description , the next two with interpretation , while the final stage is judgement .
28 It will readily be noticed that the elements of causing death by reckless driving are virtually the same as those of ‘ reckless manslaughter ’ : indeed , in Seymour ( 1983 ) the House of Lords held that they are the same , and the only doubt arises over the reference to ‘ substantial damage to property ’ in the Lawrence test .
29 However thick the dust on your bookshelves may be you will either be reassured that you still remember a great deal of what you originally learnt from your training and former jobs , or you will be seized by momentary panic at how much you have forgotten .
30 It will therefore be seen that many of the issues involved here are similar to those raised by the law of involuntary manslaughter , save for the fact that driving offences constitute deviations from a code of conduct on which all persons are tested before they are granted driving-licences .
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