Example sentences of "he will have a " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | If I ca n't take him he will have a two-hour wait for an ambulance . |
2 | ‘ His investigative talent , which he displayed in this instance , will no doubt stand him in good stead in the future and I hope that he will have a long and distinguished career , ’ he said . |
3 | When we , the hearers and readers of the narrative , and Abraham , are told by God that he will have a son by Sarah , we learn that Abraham will be a hundred years old when the child is born and Sarah is already ninety ( 17.17 ) . |
4 | He will have a high head and tail carriage , flared nostrils and a tense mouth . |
5 | He will have a fiery temper , a bad disciplinary record and a passionate spirit . |
6 | 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 . |
7 | If he takes an ( optical ) photograph of the wall he will have a snap of featureless plaster , as the light is reflected back from the surface and not from inside the structure . |
8 | Both players will this year be sampling the European Tour 's qualifying procedure for the second time and Everett feels he will have a distinct advantage this time around . |
9 | He will have a suite of apartments in the four-storey building , which was once the official residence of his mother . |
10 | As each new incumbent arrives in the levels above you he will have a different idea from his predecessor as to how things should be done . |
11 | 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 . |
12 | The proper way to put the last sentence would be to say : ‘ If B is charged with such-and-such a crime , he will have a good defence . ’ |
13 | His intention is to form a complete collection , covering the whole of his working life , so that he will have a real store of memories to look back upon in his old age . |
14 | For example , if a manager is employee-centred , if he delegates and is participative , then he will have a happy working environment but he will not produce a high performance unless he also establishes standards of performance . |
15 | He will have a certain power and extensive influence , and his Queen will fall into a more supporting role . |
16 | Moreover , where the debenture is secured by a floating charge on all the undertaking and assets of the company , he will have a legal or equitable interest in the company 's business , albeit of a different kind from that of its shareholders . |
17 | If he is under 24 , and has not been charged with this offence before and has an honest belief on reasonable grounds that the girl was above 16 , he will have a defence . |
18 | Instead , he will have a fortnightly visit to Brian Walden on Walden 's weekly interview . |
19 | ‘ Fintan is a clever , sharp player and I feel he will have a much greater influence at Breifne Park , ’ states Carroll , ‘ Besides , we expect to have even bigger support there and that should be an additional bonus . ’ |
20 | A child may appear before a hearing for reasons other than offences ; and he will have a disposal tailored to his needs for care rather than to the seriousness of the offence ; and a child may not only be put under a supervision requirement for reasons other than an offence , but he may remain under such a requirement for a period of years for reasons completely unconnected with breaches of the criminal law . |
21 | The best solution might thus be for the centre bollard to be held in place with a padlock , for which he will have a key . |
22 | ‘ He will have a strong Government . |
23 | track , because it it , no other transport business er has er does has to have a business , which op owns both the track it 's operating on and the operating er facilities themselves , so the we 're not doing anything new here , what we are actually doing , and incidentally the German government and other governments are going down the same route now because it 's not true to say that others are n't privatizing , what we 're doing is saying that we are having a separate track authority , and there are a variety of reasons for that , er but the an and that means actually less investment by the franchisee himself , but he will have control over the th the track operations , because he will have a contract , with Rail Track , to deliver certain services , and if Rail Track does n't deliver them then he 's able to claim penalties so |
24 | If it occurs after the time of supply then he will have a defence , although the retailer will be liable for breach of the implied terms under ss13-14 of SGA 1979 and analagous provisions in contracts of supply . |
25 | But if he accepts integrity and knows that some victims of emotional injury have already been given a right to compensation , he will have a reason for deciding in favour of Mrs. McLoughlin nevertheless . |
26 | Carty , who was briefly involved with the county senior side two seasons ago is the current county U-21 manager , and he will have a huge influence on today 's confrontation . |
27 | Bangor 's new coach Duncan Dysart was happy enough with the first sight of his charges last week and he will have a good opportunity to identify some grey areas when they make the trip to a high-scoring City of Derry tomorrow . |
28 | ‘ If he does that , he will have a chance to prove to me he 's worth a place in our first team . |
29 | well listen , I think I think he will have a day off today because he certainly was n't very well yesterday and then go again the day after . |
30 | And erm so he will have a phone number of the vicar and so on . |