Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] tell you " in BNC.
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1 | Leeds fans will tell you it was the arrival of Eric Cantona at Elland Road which proved the decisive factor in them lifting the title last season . |
2 | Although fans will tell you there is nothing as exciting as attacking football , those who frequent ‘ The Tip ’ have probably never witnessed a game between two attacking sides . |
3 | Your kids will tell you . |
4 | Most referees will tell you that when a new directive comes out on a particular law , referees tend to concentrate on that law , sometimes at the expense of refereeing other laws . |
5 | Many expert fishkeepers will tell you that to be successful in the hobby you must first and foremost be a water manager . |
6 | As his peers will tell you , however , he is a class player , and there are few enough of these in amateur golf . |
7 | Neither interviews nor questionnaires can tell you how people behave in a social situation . |
8 | Aquinas 'll tell you that . |
9 | But run too far in unsuitable shoes , whether the cheapest or most expensive on the market , and your feet will tell you . |
10 | As my knitting acquaintances will tell you , I am neither the shape nor the age for a mini dress ! |
11 | Having 2 ex-county players on the team has also been very worthwhile with helpful tips being tried out every week ( as the Institute chaps will tell you , comparing our game with them a few weeks ago and the Charity Match just played — sorry David what was the score … ? ) |
12 | Some companies will tell you how much of the nutrients are contained in the whole tub ! |
13 | Our sales negotiators will tell you exactly what costs are involved . |
14 | If that dreadful mid-Atlantic ‘ celebrity ’ who rummages through other people 's houses in the appalling ‘ Through the Keyhole ’ TV programme delved through the house of Australia rugby , he would find any amount of shimmering silverware — the World Cup itself , the Bledisloe Cup , and so on — but the contents would tell you nothing about the true greatness of the inhabitants . |
15 | As guidebooks will tell you , you should not rush your acclimatisation period when you arrive in the Far East . |
16 | The textbooks will tell you that chitons are herbivorous , but this is not necessarily the case . |
17 | And golf officials will tell you that the game provides clean and wholesome fun , and a stimulating outlet in an otherwise rotten world . |
18 | Even if you did n't know anything about baby-feeding times , a quick look at the TV schedules would tell you that . |
19 | The number of rings will tell you the age of the tree — a tree with 20 rings is 20 years old . |
20 | I think he was conscious of a great deal probably , but at the same time many writers will tell you that they find when they 've finished a poem or a play things in it , demonstrably in it , systematically and intelligently present with real relations , which they do n't remember writing . |
21 | I think he was conscious of a great deal probably , but at the same time , many writers will tell you , that they find when they 've finished a poem or a play , things in it , demonstrably in it , systematically and intelligently present with real relations , which they do n't remember writing . |
22 | Those who follow the favourites will tell you that the best bet is two-year-old handicaps , which have produced a profit of 14 to a 1 level stake over the last five seasons . |
23 | Some vignerons will tell you that a cask lasts only for four years . |
24 | Our top earners will tell you there 's no secret to earning twelve hundred quid a week . |
25 | Any handbook on assertiveness techniques will tell you that the first rule is to make eye contact with your interviewers . |
26 | Most chemists will tell you that , once chemical reactions become complex enough , the end result will be life . |
27 | All Lori will tell you is that she knows nothing about the jade , ’ Paige advised him steadily . |
28 | I should n't criticise it as everyone else does , because without the M25 , it would be impossible to get to all of the six clubs that we have built , strung out like pearls , ( or glass beads , my critics would tell you ) around its perimeter . |
29 | On particularly clear days ( the locals will tell you that midwinter provides the best of them ) the view reaches as far as the Vosges in France and Switzerland 's Jura . |
30 | If he 's still not exactly the life and soul of the weighing room , other jockeys will tell you he 's far more relaxed than of old . |