Example sentences of "he will be [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 He 'll be thinking about the bogey he s just made .
2 Vanity and a nod towards Alan Meale compel that we also include this : A short-sighted scribbler called Amos ; Recorded the gaffes of the famous ; And if ever his column ; Becomes faintly solemn ; He 'll be sacked on the spot ( who would blame us ) ?
3 From now on , he 'll be hanging around the motor racing pits .
4 He can play anywhere in the backline and , if he can stay injury-free this year , then I believe he 'll be touring with the Wallabies at the end of the year .
5 Nigel Rolnis found out … and in April he 'll be looking at the other end of the market , £6,000 .
6 There are likely to be plenty of times in the coming months when he 'll want to walk away , because no matter what attitude he starts with , he 'll be affected by the Grendon experience and that can be frightening .
7 He says he 'll be complaining to the chief constable .
8 Harvey said , ‘ This is Mr Dempsey , he 's coming to see you tomorrow and he 'll be staying at the Hotel Riga . ’
9 He 'll be clinging to the hope that we 'll keep his father 's bones safe for our part — and Isambard he wants for his own . ’
10 His job requires explosive power , he 'll be riding on the 4 man bobsleigh .
11 A shepherd can never be sure at what hour he 'll be done for the day , but the priest 's man leaves Upton as soon as Vespers is over , and so he did this time .
12 Now he 'll be remembered as the hunt marshall who went too far … caught on video … as he delibrately pushed a protester into the path of a hunt vehicle .
13 Although he is fit to play in the Western Division curtain-raiser today and tomorrow , it 's unlikely he 'll be utilised as a bowler .
14 He 'll be educated as a gentleman .
15 Naîve as it may sound , Morrissey 's ideals ( which ran opposite to the ‘ If he does n't get himself a missus soon he 'll be left on the shelf … or he 's a pooftah … ’ mentality ) attracted many young admirers .
16 Oh travelling 's not bad , I mean , it 's only a local train and eh , and it 's going , he 'll be going in the wrong dir the best direction each time , instead of travelling up to town he 'll be travelling out .
17 He 'll be focussing on the battle over women priests in the Episcopalian Church .
18 He 'll be returning to an empty fairground of deserted stalls , with only the faint remembered echo of the music that he 's been ignoring .
19 When he 's with the Lions , he says , he 'll be working towards a plan to suit that particular squad .
20 He 'll be walking down the drive now .
21 He 'll be racing against the best , but racing through the wind the fastest , is the biggest challenge .
22 It 's a disaster , of course it ‘ s a disaster , he 'll be banned from the US for ever presumably ; but at least he wo n't be being interfered with in some unspeakable foreign nick . ’
23 Well , he 'll be tried by a higher court than we have in this life .
24 He 'll be wasted in a cowl .
25 Oh he 'll be splattered by a in Doncaster !
26 It 's expected he 'll be taken to the Horton General Hospital in Banbury .
27 He 'll be waiting at the station and we ca n't make it now .
28 He 'll be waiting at the church for you , every day for an hour between noon … ’
29 ‘ He 's waiting to hear whether or not he 's been cast , and he 'll be feeling like a caged bear , poor darling .
30 Firstly , if the defendant receives the information in the knowledge that it is being disclosed in breach of confidence he will be bound by an obligation of confidence ( see for example Albert ( Prince ) v Strange ( 1849 ) 1 Mac & G 25 , Schering Chemicals v Falkman [ 1981 ] 2 WLR 848 ) .
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