Example sentences of "[noun pl] [coord] will [adv] have " in BNC.

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1 At present , the field has six production wells and four injectors but will eventually have 18 producers and nine injectors by 1998 .
2 A specialist addiction unit based upon the principles of the Anonymous Fellowships will have knowledge of the compulsive nature of eating disorders and will also have an awareness of how family members and other well-intentioned helpers may unwittingly enable the disease to continue .
3 In a rather larger number of situations the authorities will have quite explicit duties but will not have been given detailed guidance on how to carry them out .
4 Achieving this independence will often have taken many years and will certainly have involved a great deal of effort .
5 Those appointed to the senior status of High Court judge will have acted as Recorders and will often have sat as Deputy High Court judges , having been invited to do so from time to time .
6 The unpaid volunteers will not wear uniforms and will not have any special powers over and above those of ordinary citizens .
7 County Councils , London Borough Councils and Metropolitan District Councils have the broadest range of functions , serve the largest populations and will therefore have the larger legal departments .
8 In short , one group will be constrained to five in inferior housing with poorer immediate surroundings and will increasingly have fewer contacts with the other , wealthier , group in the village .
9 Next , it is said that lawyers and judges are not familiar with Parliamentary procedures and will therefore have difficulty in giving proper weight to the Parliamentary materials .
10 Thus , the pre-industrial family in Britain will not only have cared for its members but will also have educated them and been the focus of their work activities .
11 Registers will roll until elections are announced and then when elections are announced it will be the closing date for that particular election and polling cards will immediately be issued with massive publicity around them so that people who do n't get polling cards , discover that they 're not on registers and will still have time because they 've qualified by the qualifying date to get themselves entered onto registers within a week of the election taking place .
12 Whoever wins , their plans to boost the economy will face political obstacles and will not have an instant effect .
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