Example sentences of "[noun pl] [be] [verb] will [verb] " in BNC.

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1 But the idea of shared management is not trivial and dissent will therefore either be camouflaged — but still be there — or the party whose views are overridden will feel that it was , after all , only a nominal attempt at agreement and partnership which was intended .
2 The category into which particular losses are put will depend on the value we put on the interests which the governmental action in question has interfered with , weighed against the value we put on the end which the governmental action was designed to serve .
3 The extent to which fiduciary duties are modified will depend on what precisely is disclosed and to what the beneficiary has consented .
4 Tomorrow night plain clothes officers are expected will mix with dancers at the warehouse party , ready to catch anyone selling or using the drug Ecstasy .
5 And waters passing through the earth 's crust at hydrothermal vents etcetera will also have undergone chemical changes so again pool waters being emitted will vary in their composition .
6 Economic strategists hope the thousands of new small businesses being registered will soak up the unemployed .
7 How such paradoxical objectives are handled will depend upon the individual counsellor .
8 The actual conditions between which packs are cycled will depend on the conditions likely to be encountered in the market .
9 Knowing how these processes are organized will help us develop better computer systems for object naming , in addition to helping us understand how object naming develops in children , and how it can break down after brain damage .
10 The EC customers to whom VAT-free charges are made will have to account for VAT under the reverse charge mechanism in their member states .
11 A currency hoard is a sum of money put together by drawing all its coins from circulation on a single occasion , whereas a savings hoard is formed by gradually adding coins to a hoard over a period of several years ; the difference in the way the coins were collected will affect the internal composition of the hoard .
12 In England , James Robertson ( 1953 , 1958 ) , a colleague of Bowlby 's at the Tavistock Clinic , started a campaign to persuade children 's hospital wards to admit mothers together with their children , or at least not to restrict visiting in any way ; some hospitals welcomed the idea , others resisted it , but meanwhile a Government committee was set up which in 1959 published the ‘ Platt Report ’ on the welfare of children in hospital , recommending ‘ that all hospitals where children are treated will adopt the practice of unrestricted visiting , particularly for children below school age ’ , that ‘ it is particularly valuable for the mother to be able to stay in hospital with her child during the first day or two ’ , and that ‘ children should not be admitted to hospital if it can possibly be avoided ’ .
13 How those causes are identified will affect political priorities and is also partly influenced by them .
14 The measures being taken will include measures of facial expressiveness and of ability to interpret non verbal information , and the investigators expect to find that children of facially expressive parents will show greater ability to interpret non verbal information correctly .
15 Firstly , it seems highly likely that even apparent disparities in the way offenders are treated will fuel resentment and thereby contribute to the feelings of injustice which lie at the heart of the penal system 's crisis of legitimacy .
16 The pace at which management budgets are introduced will need to be carefully judged .
17 Readers whose letters are published will receive one of our attractive The Artist binders .
18 Readers whose letters are published will receive one of our attractive The Artist binders .
19 How far this tactical use of samples is carried will depend on the cost of the item , the cost of distribution and the number of interested journalists .
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