Example sentences of "will go [adv] [to-vb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Posters will go up to advertise the reward scheme and the animal lovers hope some of the shocking facts and figures included would spur the public into action .
2 INVESTMENT will go ahead to improve the Glasgow-London railway although the work may take longer than previously planned because of limited funds , Chris Green , managing director of InterCity , forecast yesterday .
3 They will go on to join the Royal Marines Band Service after musical training .
4 The quality of his contribution is underlined by the fact that when he retires as Scotland 's senior coach at the end of this five nations series , he will go on to coach the next Lions tour in the summer .
5 He will go on to represent the province at the UK finals in London next month .
6 We will go on to create a Department of Legal Administration headed by a Minister in the Commons who will be responsible for all courts and tribunals in England and Wales .
7 Although many patients are prescribed psychotropic medication , only a small proportion of these will go on to take an overdose .
8 The forthcoming spectacle on the Italian pitches this summer has already received considerable hype , with speculation as to whether or not Italy will go on to win the coveted trophy for a record fourth time .
9 The latest estimate is that most people with HIV will go on to develop an HIV-related illness within 10–12 years of infection .
10 The child who has been told that he is ‘ useless ’ , ‘ stupid ’ or will ‘ never amount to anything ’ will go on to become an adult whose Inner Face is that of a worthless individual — even If events prove that the truth is very different .
11 It has long been held that the writs of mandamus and prohibition will go either to compel the visitor to act if he refused to deal with a matter within his jurisdiction or to prohibit him from dealing with a matter that lies without his jurisdiction .
12 Appreciation of the ways in which the various shapes are related enables the teacher to ask further leading questions when a suitable opening presents itself in a child 's play ( e.g. commenting on the way the flat slabs will go together to make a staircase of three steps — ‘ What would we need to make the next step ? ’ ) .
13 Unless the Paris Club , which manages official debt to Western governments , proves much more generous than its past record suggests , a considerable slice of the new money will go merely to service the old loans rather than provide fresh finance for imports and investment goods to support genuine reform .
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