Example sentences of "[conj] will come [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Anyone whose car has broken down in the middle of nowhere will appreciate the value of belonging to a motoring organisation that 'll come to the rescue at any time of the day or night .
2 Catering for the resident population appears to be include catering for the population that will come into the town in order to do the new work that will be brought to the town by their policies .
3 The mountains have an undisputed lure , the Russian people a warmth and generosity that will come as a very pleasant surprise to all who arrive with an open mind and a readiness to respond with a smile .
4 She has found a number of old photographs that will come as a great surprise to me .
5 His brother Philip reports in the newsletter of the Lord 's Taverners that he is in ‘ remarkably good spirits , ’ a fact that will come as no surprise to those who known him either personally or as a BBC broadcaster .
6 If British Raik were seeking to finance this project entirely out of the relatively small amount of revenue that will come to the station from the operation of the services and from the surrounding property development , it would find that impossible .
7 A planned European visit , to take advantage of the new opportunities that will come with the Single Market , is regarded as particularly important both for self development and the identification of business opportunities .
8 The Government are determined to get rid of arrangements that differentiate against the United Kingdom , whereas the Labour party wishes to increase such differentiation and to pay farmers and others in the southern European states money that will come from the very low incomes of British farmers .
9 Does he agree that that money underlines the huge benefits to the taxpayer that will come from the privatisation of the industry , to which the Labour party is opposed ?
10 ‘ What Tory back-benchers should be thinking about is the mass retribution that will come upon the Tory Party as people discover the full impact of this treaty if it is ever brought into effect .
11 In a brief statement Edwards said : ‘ I have told my board colleagues that I will not be rushed and will come to a decision towards the end of the season . ’
12 In a brief statement Edwards said : ‘ I have told my board colleagues that I will not be rushed and will come to a decision towards the end of the season . ’
13 That is what the County Council is presently discussing and will come to a conclusion on February the twelfth , and I believe following that conclusion some small primary schools may seek to opt out .
14 Once feeding well , they will usually take frozen bloodworm without any trouble , and will come to the surface if they should see an earthworm .
15 Sun Microsystems Inc has denied that it has plans to develop a Sparc implementation of Microsoft Corp 's NT operating system , as reported last week in the US paper Open Systems Today : the paper quoted Sun president Scott McNealy as saying ‘ NT needs to be ported to Sparc — if they [ Microsoft ] do n't do it , they are missing the boat ’ ; despite the denials , observers hint darkly that some sort of effort involving Sparc and Microsoft is under way , and will come to the surface over the next few months .
16 Despite the denials , observers hint darkly that some sort of effort involving Sparc and Microsoft is underway , and will come to the surface over the next few months .
17 Hyundai 's Sparcstation 10-compatible , the HWS-S310–30 , uses Texas Instruments Inc 's 33MHz ‘ Viking ’ SuperSparc and will come with a base configuration of 32Mb memory , 434Mb disk and 19″ colour display , priced at $14,000 against Sun 's Model 30 which is $20,500 .
18 From that assessment , a group to be known as the Trailblazers will be formed and will come under the guidance of the Cliff Richard Development Trust , which is already supporting some 11 youngsters who previously progressed from the former Search for a start scheme .
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