Example sentences of "will [vb infin] to it " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I will refer to it in its re-amended form .
2 I think they will refer to it as no change .
3 ‘ Thomas will see to it , ’ said Mr Eames , who was beginning to enjoy himself .
4 It is also much easier to create a market situation which will see to it that the value goes up . ’
5 In an implicit reminder that 380,000 Soviet troops were still stationed on East German soil , he said : ‘ We firmly declared that we will see to it that no harm comes to the GDR . ’
6 I will see to it that you are not left with Mrs Ross on your hands .
7 Sun , he said , looks at the level of maintenance required and sends the relevant person for the job — if a high level of expertise is needed to deal with a particular problem , then a highly qualified engineer will see to it .
8 My son will see to it that you have an allowance to meet your everyday needs , and Padre Jorge will instruct you on the sacrament of holy matrimony and your obligations to your husband . "
9 ‘ Agnes will see to it , wo n't you ? ’
10 ‘ I mean , Mrs Willmot wo n't be the only one — or rather , Mrs Willmot will see to it that she is n't the only one .
11 South Africa , he says , must have friendly black neighbours to her North , and will see to it that Smith ‘ settles ’ with the black majority on terms that achieve this .
12 Waterstones will see to it that in 1993 bigger and even-better bookshops open throughout the land . ’
13 Cumulative selection will see to it that animals are well fitted to outrun their predators or outwit their prey , no less than it sees to it that they are well fitted to the prevailing weather conditions .
14 But they will always know the times when I shall be here in Shrewsbury , and I will see to it that whenever possible they shall have word of my moves between . ’
15 I will see to it … ’
16 Or I will see to it that everyone in Cairo knows who is the sheikh who takes money from Copts . ’
17 He will see to it that his office arrangements are parallel with the professional plane he has reached .
18 I 've given my word to her mother that I will see to it that she does — she would n't have been allowed to come here on holiday otherwise , she would have been shut up in her mother 's apartment in Rome . ’
19 ‘ Craddock will see to it . ’
20 for his firm , erm , he said I 'll , I will see to it , which she 's doing at the moment but , but erm , I do n't know how far
21 Similarly , cosmetic surgery is seen in the professional literature as an option ( some parents choose it , some do n't ) , or even as a kind of cure , especially by the surgeons contracted to perform it , whose understanding of the issues extends as far as the principle that if people see a physically normal child they will react to it ‘ normally ’ and will elicit normal behaviour .
22 This is involuntary and undesirable and many firms will react to it by reducing output and laying off workers .
23 We will return to it later .
24 I will return to it again in Chapter 8 .
25 It is difficult , I think , to overestimate the potential significance of this approach , and we will return to it at several points in this book .
26 This inherent tendency towards corporatism seems less inevitable in the late 1980s but we will return to it below .
27 The relevance of this concept is not restricted to domiciliary care , and we will return to it once we have looked at residential services .
28 Marx 's emphasis on how the individual is treated by the state remains , however , an important one and we will return to it shortly .
29 Er I do n't wish to pursue the point made by Mi Mike at this stage , but I will return to it under one C.
30 And I will return to it .
  Next page