Example sentences of "will have a [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It 's a Yale lock , and I 'm sure Bishop Julian will have a spare of it .
2 The conductance of the intergranular system having a volume V 1 with a porosity ( with respect to V , ) and with a cementation exponent m p , coefficient a equal to I , saturated with water of conductivity , will have a conductance for a sample of length L.
3 Oxford will have a tussle on their hands at the Manor .
4 yeah — i talk to him the next time i see him ; - ) ( joke ! — well i stayed at the same hotel as the norw. players before our game against england and actually talked to a couple of players … the next time i will have a chat with leeds-fan rekdal ; - ) i will however forward your wishes of luck if/when i write to the supporters club .
5 The new £78m plant will have a capacity of 120 000 tonnes per annum and once the plant is on stream ( early 1994 ) Neste plans to close some of the existing high pressure polyethylene capacity .
6 A typical pack will have a capacity of 500 mAH which , in a collective pitch model employing five servos and a gyro , may have a fully charged life of only 20–25 minutes and certainly no more than 1 hour .
7 It will have a capacity of 30 megawatts and will serve as a research and development centre .
8 By that stage , the stadium will have a capacity of 67,500 and there is already a match against South Africa scheduled for November 1994 .
9 China is taking a 33 per cent shareholding in the airport , which will have a capacity for 6.5 million passengers annually .
10 When a new car comes well cos me and Chris will will have a drive of it .
11 He 's just as likely to be found talking to a six-strong student society in Bangor as addressing 500 top Earth scientists in Washington ; he will have a drink with ( and on ) me just as readily ( or so he makes it appear ) as he will have lunch with ( and no doubt on ) the director of the US National Science Foundation ; if he 's not corresponding with some editor over some esoteric point of science , he 's trying to persuade the high-ups at the European Space Agency to do something adventurous in planetology for a change .
12 Liefmans plan to impress potential customers with their products at this month 's Innovate 91 exhibition in London where they will have a stand in the ‘ Real Ale Village ’ .
13 Certainly they will have a presence in the instant sector that will be created but they will only want to hold shares in two or three companies .
14 One client will have a problem under some recent Act relating to divorce or maintenance ; another will need advice on capital gains tax , or redundancy payments , or VAT , or company law , or agricultural tenancies , or rent control ; another will be enraged by a refusal of planning permission , or the threat of a motorway through his garden .
15 You 'll find there 's a certain kind of boy will have a go at you now because he knows he wo n't be able to touch you once you 've left school .
16 ‘ We 've got to be up there challenging and if we 're not , then people will have a go at us .
17 I find many knitters will have a go at Fair Isle knitting , but then stop there .
18 They will have a go at him .
19 Er but what I become , I thought you might become more confrontational but you did n't so so you dug a hole for yourself that you could 've dug out of you sat in there but I think you handled that quite well , but there are people like me out there who think they know it all and will have a go at you .
20 FS ( 21 ) knocked in his first goal for the seniors and addressed the other contenders for the single forward role : I will have a go for the single place up front and i would like to try it vs Costa Rica .
21 A subordinate may have a responsibility for which he will be called to account by his superior ; a board of directors may have a responsibility to its shareholders ; and a government in a democracy will have a responsibility to the electorate .
22 He will have a suite of apartments in the four-storey building , which was once the official residence of his mother .
23 Children and young people are at greatest risk as the older element of the population who have experienced this before will have a degree of resistance . ’
24 ‘ Children and young people are at greatest risk as the older element of the population who have experienced this before will have a degree of resistance . ’
25 Ideally , you will have a degree in engineering or science with a working knowledge of heat transfer mechanisms .
26 Afterwards you and I will have a day on the island . ’
27 The field is estimated to have reserves of 700 billion cubic feet of gas and will have a life of about 20 years .
28 Most boots will have a mixture of D-rings and hooks to keep the laces in place and to speed up the lacing process .
29 Any organisation will have a mixture of formal and informal rules and will allow discretion .
30 The FO 's assessor will have a say in how the BAS spends its money and will report back to the Foreign secretary on how useful the BAS is as a political presence in the Antarctic and the south Atlantic , This move , which clearly follows from Britain 's determination to outface Argentina in the region , brings a new political backdrop to the activities of scientists in the Antarctic .
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