Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun pl] will " in BNC.

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1 Now that each party has formal election procedures through which to choose its Leader , the Queen in normal circumstances will not have to make a personal choice between rival candidates for Prime Minister , a choice which she had to make in 1957 and in 1963 before the Conservative Party adopted election rules .
2 Activists in rich countries will organise consumer boycotts of genetically engineered foods , while farmers in the south take action to oppose the patenting of genes .
3 Individuals paying less than £2,400 a year in free-standing AVCs will not normally need to involve their employer but just have to certify that they are not paying more than 15 per cent of their earnings in total contributions .
4 By definition , many nine-year-olds in junior schools will be achieving at the level of many thirteen-year-olds in secondary schools .
5 Twenty teachers in eight schools will be involved with classes of 6 , 8 , 12 and 14 year olds .
6 Usually , parliamentary agents specialising in Private Bills will have been employed .
7 The largest group of gold jewellery and objects still in private hands will be on show in New York at Michael Ward Inc. ( 2 April to 5 June ) .
8 The extracellular matrix laid down by microbial cells in microbial biosensors will show a more random orientation of structural components , but these can also have a dominant influence on the flux of the product and the substrate .
9 ‘ But I think this time it 's different in that teams will have to score two goals to beat us because we 're always going to get one .
10 Two teenagers have chosen to bed down for the night in a freezer as part of their training for an expedition to the Artic Circle , They hope that a good night of shivering in sub-zero temperatures will prepare them for the trip .
11 Therefore , the impact of manufacturing employment in rural areas will depend on the precise nature of the firms that have been established .
12 There is anxiety that there will be rationalisation and that some colleges and available classes in rural areas will cease to exist .
13 We must try to help ourselves to come to terms with the changes in farming , but if the present position persists , farmers in rural areas will not be seen to be working in line with the avowed aim of my right hon. Friend the Minister of a good environmental policy mixed with good farming .
14 A survey of farmers ' attitudes , and of possible social effects in rural areas will complete the study .
15 Only if the lowering of production costs results in lower prices will there be any benefits to consumers .
16 If attention is paid to these , then some of the uncertainty which is inevitably present in innovative activities will be more effectively managed .
17 By using the relatively new and rather powerful transactions cost analytical approach , combined with conventional and radical approaches within organisation theory , and insights from the sociology of work , combined with the results from recent empirical work on the introduction of new technology , the intention is to set out some of the possibilities and choices about the use of new technology at work , indicating the different pay-offs to particular groups , and suggesting that the outcomes in specific cases will depend not just on the technology itself but on the strategy and power of the various interested parties .
18 So the evidence suggests that because of their age and frailty those living in residential homes will have needed more care during the last year of their lives than other people who died .
19 ‘ While this distinction exists , the ability of health and social services to provide seamless care in residential homes will be severely curtailed . ’
20 The First Level Certificate in Commercial Studies will be offered for the last time in 1993 .
21 Cross-cultural differences are difficult to research even though anyone who works in different cultures will assure you they exist .
22 Brown & Levinson point out the importance for social relationships of establishing common ground and agreeing on points of view , and illustrate the lengths to which speakers in different cultures will go to maintain an appearance of agreement , and they remark ‘ agreement may also be stressed by repeating part or all of what the preceding speaker has said ’ ( 1978:117 )
23 These examples of patterns of discipline — different parental approaches to good and naughty behaviour — if repeated over and over again in different situations will lead to either a badly behaved ( disobedient ) child or a reasonably compliant youngster .
24 These include the context of the events and people 's perceptions and interpretations of violent behaviour , as the same behaviour in different situations will be perceived very differently .
25 Things are changing and work in public affairs will probably become as accepted and widely used in Britain as it is in the United States .
26 Failure to ensure dogs wear a collar and some form of identification in public places will be an offence and the legislation also requires those who find a stray dog to report it to the authorities .
27 Pilots who have only flown in light winds will be dangerously incompetent in rough weather , particularly if they are also out of current flying practice .
28 Second , costs for the new system will generally be no higher than they are now , and in some circumstances will be lower .
29 All the animals here , including some birds , may be approached and in some cases will allow themselves to be petted and stroked .
30 The consequence of this may be , and in some cases will be , to divest a third party of title to property which since the commencement of the bankruptcy he has acquired from the bankrupt .
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