Example sentences of "will [vb infin] on [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Hopefully it will take constructive criticism well and will carry on the excellent scientific work of the NCC . |
2 | Young birds learn from their parents and will carry on the same method . |
3 | The business sale agreement will usually provide that , if a VAT liability arises from a supply which the parties expected to be outside the scope of VAT , the consideration will be VAT exclusive where this is caused by a breach of warranty by Newco ( for example , that it will carry on the same kind of business as the vendor after completion ) . |
4 | Increasingly the role of initial assessment will take on a new importance and will focus on centres ' guidance structures and procedures . |
5 | ‘ I am sure that as classes get bigger and lectures replace the old tutorial and seminar systems , books will take on a higher perceived value as they become more central to the course . ’ |
6 | As training programmes are made available , and on-the-job experience builds up , it is anticipated that both maintenance and operations staff will take on a wider range of tasks . |
7 | This is noticeable after a long soak in the bath ; the pads of your fingertips will take on a wrinkled appearance . |
8 | But if , having served a term in purgatory , if having had the chance to try his arguments on other philosophers , Hegel was not unrepentant , he might agree that there was perhaps something in the alternative view : that each of the factors affecting historical development does have its own authenticity ; that they act upon and react to one another ; that from time to time this or that factor will take on a greater or lesser importance ; that of course — with a nod in the direction of Marx — at least since the neolithic age and the development of agriculture the mode of production has been a major factor ; and that the actions of particular men , Marx among them , have in fact been formative , changing not merely the degree of development of a kind already prescribed by a programme of social evolution , but the kind of development itself . |
9 | Sometimes in country districts a pool will take on a purplish tinge , a curious slimy jelly appears around the perimeter , and the fish and plants start to die . |
10 | Train spotting in East Anglia will take on a whole new meaning . |
11 | MOVING the goalposts will take on a whole new meaning in Sedgefield next week . |
12 | Laundry will require less soaps , detergents and fabric conditioners and will take on a luxurious feel . |
13 | ‘ What I mean is , where they are going the pecking order they have created will take on a mortal significance , red in tooth and claw . ’ |
14 | You will be semi-detached from the world around you for a wee while Wednesday and all the people and places that make up your life will take on a shadowy irrelevance until you come to terms with your own innermost thoughts and feelings . |
15 | It is likely that computerized storage and retrieval facilities will take on an increasing importance in literary studies ; so it is worth exploring them whenever you can . |
16 | THIS year 's Festival in the Park in Frodsham will take on an American theme to mark Independence Day . |
17 | He will take on the new post of Communications Manager , ‘ leading and co-ordinating all aspects of our public relations ’ , according to Sotheby 's Chairman Lord Gowrie . |
18 | The boy 's body will take on the squarer , more muscular appearance of manhood . |
19 | Experiments in pickling different alloys of copper and zinc have shown that only alloys with between 2 and 10 per cent of copper in the zinc will take on the black patina , and the silver and brass inlays are unaffected by the pickling solution . |
20 | Under the name DNV Technica , the new company will take on the current operations of the Technica Group and the risk and reliability services of DNV . |
21 | That assumption allows us to retrace and anticipate , as it were , the steps a statesman — past , present , or future — has taken or will take on the political scene . |
22 | Later today the Argentinian will take on the third seed , Conchita Martinez of Spain , who beat Sabatini 's compatriot Patricia Tarabini in the quarter-final . |
23 | Diana will put on a united front for the sake of her sons and spend Christmas Day at Sandringham with the other Royals . |
24 | Once she has had a good rest , her world will put on a fresh complexion . ’ |