Example sentences of "it will [verb] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It will ruin Olga socially . ’
2 It will make salmonella and listeria look like peanuts .
3 The proponents of this approach to policy claim that it will encourage a more stable background in which the private sector can make its own investment and spending plans with greater certainty about future government policy ; that it will prevent abrupt and damaging shifts of policy ; and that it will make government manipulation of monetary policy for electoral purposes more difficult .
4 This situation is known as one of negative ‘ net-effective cost ’ ( NEC ) , and the CEGB should undertake any investment promising NEC on the grounds that it will make electricity prices cheaper than if it were to do nothing .
5 It will make matters so much easier all round if everyone is . ’
6 Novell has announced that it will make NetWare available on NT .
7 If the threat of ( big ) wars is small , it will make sense to spend more of that money researching and developing weapons and less on putting them into full-scale production — or on training and feeding expensive troops .
8 Long term , as performance improves and services become more commercially attractive as a result of bringing in private sector disciplines , it will make sense to consider whether some services can be sold outright .
9 Generally , it will make sense to use whatever information is available to develop an interpretation — use both mental model and representation of surface form to work out the meaning of both deep and surface anaphors .
10 So in point of fact idioms is you 'll find that they always fit in either this slot or in this slot , but you wo n't find an idiom which has to form such that if you remove the subject and verb from a sentence you can stick the idiom in there and it will make sense .
11 It will make sense for the partnership agreement ( Clause 17.01 ) to contain appropriate details as to the election procedures and basic provisions as to the length of tenure and the circumstances in which a senior partner can be required to stand down .
12 It will make Anna very happy , I promise you . ’
13 Meyrick of that ilk , of Western Province , is apparently a fast bowler like his New Zealand and ( sort of ) England colleagues , so it will make life easy for the commentary team : ‘ It 's Pringle to take the new ball , ’ will apply in almost half the matches played .
14 Geoff Butterwick , public transport manager for Suffolk County Council , said : ‘ We 've only had it for a few weeks but it 's already proving useful and I 'm sure it will make life a lot easier .
15 It will make Lyles into a single factory and not split into three separate units as it is now with its warehouse inconveniently separated .
16 It will make peanuts look like microdots .
17 That is because I know it will make things easier for you later on .
18 It will make things better .
19 The Government has indicated it will make provision in the Bill for such an amendment .
20 It will make provision for mixed-ability groups much easier to organise , and encourage independent study .
21 The whole process of rationalising the RNR will be progressed in conjunction with the Ministry of Defence and with the RNR itself and it will make proposals .
22 It will make recommendations on whether the National Grid Company should be allowed to build a series of pylons from Lackenby on Teesside to Shipton , near York .
23 But by the introduction of student loans , and the end of free tuition , it will make entry into higher education dependent more than ever on the size of a parent 's bank balance .
24 It will make distinctions between vital and dormant areas , Courtney said .
25 It may be slow progress ; it will make demands on our energy and our lives .
26 It will make time appear to travel slower .
27 Indeed it will make use of the laws of physics , and nothing more than the laws of physics .
28 With this scenario , assume next that the company decides to set its price initially at 56,700 and lets it be known generally that it will hold price at that level until the average cost per unit of cumulative output falls below that figure , whereupon the company will set its price at 20 per cent above the falling average cost per cumulative unit .
29 ( 3 ) If the larger company has acquired shares in the smaller company prior to the takeover then , following the reverse takeover offer , it will hold shares in its parent company ( ie the smaller company ) contrary to CA 1985 , s23 .
30 It will hold stock and spares and says it could get first machines as early as September from its US parent .
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