Example sentences of "his [noun sg] will [vb infin] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Then the Principal gave his mind to the arrangements for a Moral Re-Armament inter-racial international assembly , to which his university will play host next June .
2 That is where his weakness will lie .
3 If the regime is to be saved , his successor will have no choice but to make changes .
4 He was tremendously successful and his successor will have a hard time emulating him .
5 But he or his successor will have to wait a little longer for the revenue benefits which should flow from the more buoyant climate for project investment he has tried to create .
6 It is not clear whether his successor will have the same remit or whether the individual plants will be divisionalised within GEC .
7 However , from the landlord 's point of view too close a relationship between rent and profit means that his income will depend to a large extent on the efficiency with which the tenant carries on business rather than on the value of the demised property .
8 As the future of manufacturing investment depends on confidence in future economic performance , does my right hon. Friend think that anyone contemplating what will happen to his income will feel more confident if he is threatened with slow torture rather than immediate amputation ?
9 The higher price being paid for environmentally sound produce also means that , despite the smaller crop , his income will stay much the same .
10 His heart will have started to race as he looked left and right and saw the two main practice strips .
11 Man , for his part will become the short-lived individual who will strive to safeguard that pattern by exalting the keeper that is his Created God , and this God will endure for as long as there is life on earth and no longer .
12 His experience will become centred on machines ; eventually , his kind will become adjuncts of the machine .
13 If things work out well for him he will do good with his money , if he does n't go out spending like he does , his money will do alright .
14 He accepts that his decision will cost him money , but he has no regrets about his career as a bookseller .
15 Henceforth , his decision will settle for them what to do .
16 He can be assured , if that is so , that even those who disagreed with his decision will work together to make it a great success .
17 Much of the material on which the Home Secretary is likely to base his decision will have been available to the prisoner at his trial : the evidence , both for and against him , any reports considered by the court , and remarks in mitigation made on his behalf ( as is now the practice ) .
18 Mr Martinson was especially grateful for a modern medical process which may mean that his skin will repair without having skin grafts .
19 For the British economy , with inflation rising and growth slowing , his budget will do little harm .
20 ‘ It definitely is not a fair match , but whether his bike will stick the bumpy course is another matter .
21 If however , it can be said that the employee had reasonable grounds for believing the information to be part of knowledge properly acquired during his employment then his defence will succeed .
22 His experience will become centred on machines ; eventually , his kind will become adjuncts of the machine .
23 ‘ It will be great to bring him back into the club , and his experience will help us .
24 He was fortunate to get away with his life , but sooner or later his luck will run out . ’
25 His trial will take place at Bristol Crown court at a date yet to be fixed .
26 ( b ) Contributory negligence This defence will apply in actions under the Act , and a visitor who has failed to use reasonable care for his own safety and that failure was a cause of his damage will have his damages reduced .
27 Kruger favours pen-based machines because he says they make life easier for the user — all he needs to do is ring the bit of text he wants to file away for future reference , and his computer will store it away on hard disk .
28 But when a user smokes 12 , his mouth will taste like ‘ four dozen chewed-up cigars ’ ,
29 If the landowner 's compensation amounts to £200 , or even just tips over to £101 , then his agent will notch up to £170 .
30 John Upson says he thinks his horse will win .
  Next page