Example sentences of "will have a [adj -er] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 BY THE end of this month the International Stock Exchange will have a clearer idea of the problems ahead of it in its establishment of a clearing house for the settlement of share deals .
2 And Lennie will have a clearer idea after the game about his side 's strengths and weaknesses .
3 Because of her daily contact with the sufferer the warden will have a clearer idea of the degree of dementia than anyone , family or otherwise , whose contact is only occasional .
4 Governors will have a clearer picture of what actually takes place in school .
5 ‘ A steering group and a project team have been formed and we will have a clearer indication of how to best integrate our teams by the end of this month . ’
6 FANS OF THE open-top jeep as a means of safari travel will have a wider choice in Zambia from next year , when the national airline 's subsidiary , Africa Bound , will start regular game drives through South Luangwa and Kafue national parks — £1,233 for a 10-day tour .
7 Even the Government accept that all-purpose authorities will have a wider role ; but the local authority delivers services .
8 And remember , you will have a wider role to play in the working of your ship , as one of a first aid party , or a member of a gun crew , for instance .
9 A soil rich in humus will have a greater capacity for water retention , aeration will be improved with less leaching of nutrients , and heavier soils will become easier to work .
10 ( Such specialists will have a greater degree of experience , and have completed additional education and training ; their qualifications may be disease linked , i.e. diabetic liaison , stoma care , or may represent specialist knowledge in nursing intervention or in health promotion .
11 There is a strong perception that multimedia products related to well-respected , successful books will have a greater chance of success because of that relationship .
12 In such a case ‘ appropriate ’ technology will have a greater chance of being accepted .
13 If context affects the recognition point of a word , as this result suggests , then it should be possible to show that a context which makes a word very predictable will have a greater effect on fluent restorations than a context which makes a word only fairly predictable .
14 The change in aggregate demand will have a bigger effect on output and employment , the more elastic is the aggregate supply curve .
15 He took things easy during yesterday 's training at Clonshaugh but will have a stiffer work-out today before manager Jack Charlton names his starting 11 .
16 Whenever we work with data values that have been generated by a growth process , we will have a better chance of revealing regularities in their behaviour if we convert them first to logs .
17 They are practices which ensure that those who have the advantage of a network of friends and relations in secure employment will have a better chance of obtaining jobs than those who have a network of friends and relations who have suffered long-term unemployment .
18 You will also understand yourself more , you will have a better idea of what motivates you .
19 This way you will have a better idea of whether the job will suit you , you avoid wasting your and the interviewer 's time , and you sidestep one possibility of creating a negative impression .
20 ‘ We will have a better idea tomorrow as to whether he is out of danger but he is looking healthy .
21 We may assume , however , that he will have a better understanding of the purpose of the author in constructing the text in the way it is constructed if he knows that it is written in the late nineteenth century ( which will account for some differences in code , in Hymes ' terms ) in Victorian England ( which will account for the reference to a Reformatory ) and that the author is constructing the first English detective story , narrating the events from the point of view of four different participants , whose characters are in part revealed by the narrative style which the author assigns to them .
22 They will have a better understanding within their district of the the supply of site property that can be is available for conversion .
23 But I think it 's time , I think we both agree that the time er well used because it 's for the because your Lordship will have a better understanding of the evidence when the plaintiff and the defendant give it from the witness box .
24 You will have a better body shape .
25 It seems like you got there 's a logic , there are arguments behind what you 're doing , and you 're equalising things certainly , but I suppose what comes to mind is this phrase to rob Peter to pay Paul , and it must be very difficult to explain to the people in the old folks home when it 's being closed , I 'm sorry , you 're doing this so that somebody else in a different part of the country will have a better quality of life .
26 Since some speakers ( those who have low " competence " ) do not use many Patois features anyway , these speakers will have a lower Patois index than other speakers who code switch to the same extent , but who use more Patois features in the Patois part of their talk .
27 For the most part , calendars will have a lower mark-up than posters , card or other paper products , but this will largely depend on your buying power .
28 Our Readers will have a farther Account of this excellent Lady in a future Number .
29 This kind of programme will have a higher proportion of " talking heads " than any of the other types discussed here .
30 Successful schools will have a higher proportion of pupils from social classes 1 and 2 .
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