Example sentences of "it will [be] [vb pp] that " in BNC.

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1 Here it will be argued that an indirect , and occasionally a direct , relationship does exist .
2 It will be argued that when the second source is threatened as well as the first , the power to coerce can devolve on the civil sphere in a substantive way .
3 On the other hand , it will be argued that the large number of arrests points to a malaise of such dimensions that it can not completely be dealt with by a police investigation and that a wider inquiry is called for .
4 It will be argued that Leapor 's work contributes to a fairly broad movement among labouring class poets to provide an accurate account of work and social conditions in their time .
5 It will be argued that the circumstances of Nepal and Zambia are not unusual in that a set of political preconditions for a successful soil conservation policy are not present , and only exist in very rare circumstances ( the most outstanding examples being the Republic of South Africa , and South Korea ) .
6 The end-of-the-year demonstrations appeared to be caused by ‘ racial ’ conflict between Chinese and African students , but it will be argued that these were once again expressions of the Chinese students ' general discontent and disappointment after ten years of reform .
7 When we look at the normalisation movement we can see that it has implications for professional approaches , but it will be argued that the concept itself has been open to more than one interpretation leading to differential impact on professional practice .
8 It will be argued that one of the central features of the business company is the way in which it centralizes the authority to manage the capital which it aggregates from its investors in the hands of corporate managers .
9 It will be argued that the BBC will not necessarily show a game every Sunday .
10 This is important for understanding the way in which it will be argued that Talcott Parsons has misunderstood Freud .
11 It will be argued that if studies of communication are to be artificially restricted to the verbal channel , then a medium that does this ‘ naturally ’ like the telephone should be used .
12 It will be argued that basically these sentences are semantically deviant ; however , it must also be recognised that it is not possible to disentangle semantics from grammar completely .
13 It will be argued that one of these types of variation involves the selection , by the context , of different units of sense , while the other type is a matter of contextual modification of a single sense .
14 On the one hand it will be argued that organisations possess characteristics and pose problems that go beyond those of their individual members ; on the other hand , some people will take the view that only people , not systems , are capable of change .
15 It will be argued that the developments of the economic class structure noted in the previous two chapters open up certain opportunities for socialism , but also place certain constraints on what a socialist movement can hope to achieve .
16 It will be argued that the division of labour does not determine the pattern of pertinent social collectivities but along with certain other factors constitutes a complex grid of social differentiation within which social collectivities may be formed .
17 It will be argued that a party should stand by its beliefs : it should not bend with the wind and adopt views that happen to be popular .
18 It will be argued that such factors may have had considerable influence on what are widely believed to have been exclusively ‘ political ’ decisions .
19 It will be argued that if a policeman is confronted by a situation in which he fears that violence will be directed towards him if he intervenes , or it is likely that there will be such violence , the offence is committed .
20 It will be argued that every event of the war can not be covered in one volume , but it seems strange that Brown saw fit to include a chapter on the making of the film of the Somme .
21 Generally it will be argued that the terms were accepted by an employee on behalf of the other party .
22 It will be argued that the decision to put something in other words is essentially a decision about style , a point which is , perhaps , anticipated by Burton-Roberts when he describes loose apposition as a rhetorical device .
23 It will be argued that the enterprises ' distinctiveness is to be found in their relationship to the state .
24 It will be argued that despite the obvious impact of government policy , the way in which policies are converted into practice within the enterprise and the precise form they take are problematic .
25 In this section it will be argued that , since industrial relations form part of the overall texture of state enterprise activity , the logic of public enterprises provides a starting point for understanding their industrial relations .
26 In the case of the other three functions , it will be argued that it is difficult to see how they could be treated as separate : for example , the placement of tonic stress is closely linked to the presentation of ‘ new ’ information , while the question/statement distinction and the indication of contrast seem to be equally important in grammar and discourse .
27 It is of course true that in many cases it will be stated that the nave is , for example , twelfth-century , the chancel fifteenth ( with nineteenth-century restorations ) , the north chapel twentieth , and so on , but it will not record the stained glass now gone or the wall monuments which have decayed ( or , obviously , the changes wrought since the booklet was written ) .
28 It will be observed that this is the way its own mother asserts her dominance and will easily be understood by the pup .
29 Equations ( 1.16.3 ) and ( 1.16.4 ) show that the characteristic equation may be written in the alternative forms unc It follows that the Cayley-Hamilton theorem unc can be written in the alternative form , in which for consistency each factor has been multiplied by -1 , unc It will be observed that , with eigenvalues all different , each of these matrices has degeneracy 1 , the product of all n factors having degeneracy n : i.e. it is null ; this is an illustration of Sylvester 's law of degeneracy ( Theorem XII of 1.22 ) .
30 It will be observed that in this approach we have not used cs ( which we have already found ) ; its introduction would spoil the simplicity of ( 2 ) .
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