Example sentences of "will [vb infin] [pron] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 with business direct , we will deliver what you need , together with your travel documents , by registered post to your home or office .
2 Yes Mr Chairman erm I understand the motive behind this proposal resolution but I think the mover perhaps is unaware of what 's actually going on and have to decide and so I would like to speak against this resolution and I think the constructive thing to do so we do n't send the wrong messages would be to er I , I will move an amendment er and I will explain what I 'm doing as I speak .
3 ‘ Mollie will lend me hers . ’
4 In two months he will earn what he earned in a year working for the Pentagon .
5 If it slips out , it will damage whatever you 're fixing .
6 As a result I undergo a bout of conscience , taking the short rod only when Odd-Knut assures me that we will eat whatever we catch , and that we will probably not catch anything .
7 Basically , it will eat whatever it can find and catch .
8 Butterflyfish are prime examples of this group many species of which feed exclusively upon coral polyps while other benthic foragers such as Porcupinefish , Boxfish and Puffers will eat anything they can catch .
9 There the chickens run around your feet and will eat anything you offer , including ice cream .
10 Although any discrepancies may seem trivial , interviewers will regard everything you say with suspicion if they find that you have apparently lied on one particular answer .
11 I would suggest that this is essentially a do-it-yourself exercise and becomes part of your general observation of speech , bearing in mind that different accents and ways of speaking will influence what you see/hear .
12 ‘ The cook will prepare whatever you wish , ’ he said quietly .
13 Tivoli Systems will remain what it always was , a sub-integrator of the systems management piece .
14 Tivoli will remain what it always was , a sub-integrator of the systems management piece .
15 We feel differently about our parents when we are children than we do as adults , and while this may not alter our recollections of everyday family life , it will affect what we choose to highlight , and how we sum up our relationship with them .
16 The type of audience you are addressing will affect what you will say and how you say it .
17 They will make what they feel is the right decision . ’
18 Bob Sillitoe says Paul will make it he has the guts and determination
19 Although they did n't , they did n't act illegally , they did n't say right , we 're going to make the redundancy payment act , but what they did say you retire at fifty , we will make your we will enhance your pension to what you would have got at age sixty , we will enhance your lump sum to what you would have got at age sixty and erm give you a redundancy payment from the firm and obviously everybody fifty and plus they 've gone in thousands , they had enormous waiting lists and then they had to say no , you ca n't go you know , too many people wanted to go .
20 Someone else may have something you want , but there is no guarantee that they will want what you have to offer them in return .
21 They drive one into the bark as they utter the wish , which has been properly formulated , with the conventional phrases of worship and respect , so that the loa deep inside the tree will not take offence and will grant what they wish .
22 But Dave said Tesco 's ca n't do , what they did they did it at Weybridge , they said let us buy your sight you say where you wan na sight and then they and we will build what you
23 Basically , Moon will build anything you want , with whatever hardware , body shape , neck profile or pickups you desire .
24 It is quite often the case that a speaker will treat what he was talking about in his last contribution as the most salient elements and what the other speaker talked about , though more recent , as less salient .
25 We need at the end to have simplified to a stage where one sentence , almost a slogan , will describe what we believe , and what we can accept and work to .
26 Hamish McLeod from the University of Edinburgh will describe what he has been doing and discuss what teachers might do .
27 ‘ We will discuss what we have learned on this tour and the various aspects that have influenced us .
28 It usually takes the form of a huge , shaggy white dog , about the size of a bull-calf , which will pursue anyone it sees .
29 In fifty minutes or so , you will have an extraordinary experience : you will know nothing of the baglady to begin with , but you will know everything you need to know by the end .
30 Quiz them and they wo n't be able to tell you what was said , but they will know what they intend to say .
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