Example sentences of "will be [verb] [prep] [v-ing] " in BNC.

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1 THE chancellor will be reprimanded for hiding a £4,700 payment used to evict a prostitute from his former home .
2 The job will be connected with helping Italians who hid or otherwise helped prisoners-of-war . ’
3 This research will be extended by examining 10- to 16-year olds ' perceptions of advertisements for alcoholic drinks .
4 A particular strategy will be followed in mounting this contrast .
5 In this section the facility of the Laplace transformation technique will be demonstrated by applying it to find the transient response in a few illustrative cases .
6 They will be trained by observing other leaders in action .
7 What provision will be made for soundproofing ?
8 No progress will be made without agreeing what the fundamental questions and issues really are . ’
9 Electronic Communications Some significant efficiency improvements will be made by establishing electronic links between the Library 's ordering system and Finance 's accounting package .
10 In the remaining span of the project , it is hoped that further progress will be made in understanding the relationship between these properties and the modelling and estimation techniques which give rise to them .
11 Whilst the purchaser may wish to elicit the vendors ' considered expectations before giving any indication , it is doubtful that much progress will be made in satisfying the above objectives without the purchaser giving a suitably caveated valuation range or at least an indication of the band of earnings multiples/net asset premiums it may be prepared to apply .
12 Unless general practitioners can be persuaded that a digital rectal examination is not a physical assault and that measurement of serum prostate specific antigen concentration is a sensitive screening test for prostatic cancer , no progress will be made in detecting prostatic cancer .
13 We therefore fear that , in Wales at least , it is unlikely much progress will be made in tackling this urgent problem .
14 If you do not have Marketing privilege , you will be able to view the various Index pages , but you will be prevented from entering any of the available options .
15 If do you not have the required privilege , you will be able to view the various index pages , but you will be prevented from entering any of the privileged options .
16 The imposition of a curriculum from above will not mean , if assurance given by politicians is to be believed , that teachers will be prevented from delivering it in the way they think most appropriate .
17 If do you not have the required privilege , you will be able to view the various index pages , but you will be prevented from executing any of the privileged options .
18 For example , they will be prevented from spending public money on campaigns to stop them .
19 For example it is not known if landlords will be prevented from making unfair rent rises to cover what they claim is the cost of the Council Tax .
20 In this chapter , the inductivist account of science will be criticized by casting doubt on the third of these assumptions .
21 We both believe the study will be strengthened by taking a broad and balanced look at transport and environment issues .
22 In addition , the legislation will be strengthened by granting powers to enable the Director General of Fair Trading to initiate investigations where there is a suspicion that prohibitions are being breached .
23 In the longer term , casualty totals will be monitored by extending the data in Tables 5 and 6 on an annual basis .
24 In the long term casualty totals will be monitored by extending the data in Tables 12–16 on an annual basis .
25 In the longer term casualty totals will be monitored by extending the data in Tables 17–20 on an annual basis .
26 In the longer term casualty totals will be monitored by extending the data in Tables 21–23 on an annual basis .
27 Such effect will be monitored by extending Table 25 on an annual basis .
28 A further £25,000 will be saved by scrapping additional garden maintenance .
29 The likely effects of various tax and welfare benefit proposals will be analysed by applying simulation models to data on households and firms .
30 The influence of technological change on industrial competitiveness will be analysed by relating trends in technology to changes in the economic environment in which they take place .
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