Example sentences of "will be to [art] " in BNC.

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1 But this will be to no avail if the choreographer is attempting to tell a story and does not have expert advice from musicians of the calibre of Edwin Evans , Constant Lambert and John Lanchbery .
2 Last-making will be to a higher standard .
3 And , because 400 years of Christianity have n't entirely obliterated caste , this will be to a Christian of Brahmin stock .
4 In a company , accountability will be to a Board of Directors , if it is a local authority then the Chief Executive is accountable to the full Council and the Principal of your College is accountable to the Board of Governors ( see figure 24 ) .
5 The trips will be to the Clare Lakelands and Shannon .
6 ‘ In hospitals that ‘ opt out ’ , there may be an increase in cold surgery and cardiovascular medicine for the better off — but it will be to the further detriment of primary care , preventive medicine and local services in poorer areas . ’
7 There can be no doubt that future changes along these lines will continue and pose particular problems , most of which will be to the detriment of the birds of Sussex .
8 The longer we delay the worse it will become and the more expensive it will be to the nation at large . ’
9 This offer will be to the Gentiles as well as the Jews .
10 It is our aim to keep you happy throughout your membership with a high level of personal service , and complete confidence that every recording you order through Britannia Music will be to the very highest standards .
11 If you position the N1 cam in the centre of the machine , then when you divide for the ‘ V ’ part ‘ A ’ of the pattern will be to the left of the neck and part ‘ B ’ to the right when viewed from the knit side .
12 And I think you will agree it will be to the best advantage of all if the holidays were curtailed .
13 Even experienced mountain walkers take to them with varying degrees of enthusiasm — so you should consider if that sort of thing will be to the taste of everyone in your group .
14 [ Drawing on a case register summary he continues ] any further reduction of mental hospital beds will be to the detriment of the chronic mentally disturbed person .
15 Non-fiction now , and with the hardback of John McCarthy and Jill Morrell 's story coming in April , the Beirut hostage horror will be to the fore again .
16 Bemoaning the difficulty is no solution , even though lack of attendance will be to the inconvenience of both parties .
17 The droppings they create will need to contact flies which in turn will be to the spiders whose garden of webs will soon bale the windows .
18 In Japan it will be to the particular company , while in the Arab world it is the family which is the key to social , business and over-arching structures .
19 Instead of the public sector having the advantage of free or subsidised services , the higher the charge the nearer it will be to the private alternative .
20 It is too early to say exactly what powers the committee will have , or indeed how sympathetic they will be to the aim of preserving such areas , but this sets a dangerous precedent .
21 If , for any reason , these other institutions find themselves short of liquidity their first resort will be to the discount market for repayment .
22 In particular , if the general level of prices is higher at , say , P 1 the LM curve will be to the left of LM at , say , LM , and the equilibrium level of aggregate demand will be lower at Y 1 .
23 Will the Minister of State nevertheless assure me that if the move to day care will be to the detriment of those who were receiving in-patient care for endocrine and metabolic problems , he will take action ?
24 However , the Prime Minister is not capable of obtaining a deal which will be to the benefit of the British people .
25 I hope that the decision taken tonight will be to the benefit of the whole nation .
26 This , together with the dearth of negotiated work resulted in a declining turnover in 1992 but there is no doubt that our policy of not buying work to satisfy turnover will be to the advantage of the business and its people in the long term .
27 On 10 June I received a letter from Mr. , which made reference to the site meeting I held with you on 4 June , and then said , and I quote , ‘ the volunteers will carry out the resurfacing works on the Canal towing path … ’ ; ‘ after the works are completed … ’ ; ‘ the upgrading works carried out by your organisation will be to the benefit of all canal users ’ .
28 On 10th June I received a letter from Mr. L. , referring to the site meeting with G. and stating , I quote , ‘ although the volunteers will carry out the resurfacing works on the Canal towing path … ’ ; ‘ after the works are completed … ’ ; ‘ the upgrading works carried out by your organisation will be to the benefit of all canal users ’ .
29 If the approach to be found here can be tied to a previous tradition , it will be to the modern speculative grammar of which Jespersen and Sapir were eminent exponents earlier in the century ; this tradition has become unfashionable in the past two or three decades , though distinguished work in this mode has still been produced by various scholars , for instance P. H. Matthews in England and Dwight Bolinger in America ; in particular , if there are any worthwhile results in the present text , they owe much to Bolinger 's example of investigation through careful scrutiny of what really happens grammatically when a given expression is used .
30 For married couples , it seems likely that it will be to an extent related to the degree of easy intimacy which they have achieved in sexual relations .
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