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

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1 You 'll always be a loser .
2 ‘ Hard living on since you 've been gone , there 'll always be a place for you in my space time . ’
3 So I 'll always be a black film-maker and I welcome that . ’
4 ‘ YOU LOOK AT ME YOU SEE A BLACK MAN , YOU DO N'T SEE A FILM-MAKER , SO I 'LL ALWAYS BE A BLACK FILM-MAKER AND I WELCOME THAT . ’
5 I 'll always be a mixture of faults and virtues .
6 It 'll always be a sterling fund , but it can be moved into other currencies , or into gilts , as your fund obviously is .
7 It 's a great feeling when a wild animal shows you affection , but even though she was born in captivity she 'll always be a wild creature with the instincts of a killer . ’
8 He 'll always be a flier , but with skill and imagination , he hopes to bring this dream safely home .
9 ‘ I 'll always be a supporter of a strong , independent and properly funded BBC .
10 Er well we would we would record them and and that would be it you know but we would have a fair idea when we 'd be recording the album like that you know there 's always be a place in a Foster and Allen programme for a Beautiful Dreamer so if you get a sound that 's pretty close to that there 'll always be a place for a an up tempo sound that that Mick would do so you have to sort of pick ones with a good story line and a good melody and again that you can work a good video round you know .
11 The popular songs of the day encapsulated perfectly its mood — patriotism , courage , facile optimism masking anxiety and heartache : ‘ Coming in on a Wing and a Prayer ’ ; ‘ There 'll Always be an England ’ ( even the Scots seemed not to mind this ! ) ;
12 ‘ We 'll never give in ! ’ said Our Gracie , and led the auditorium audience of 10,000 in several rousing verses of ‘ Land of Hope and Glory ’ and ‘ There 'll Always Be An England ’ .
13 My memories of that event are hazy but I felt that I should have somehow or other done something , crawled about the burning ground with my leg hanging off singing ‘ There 'll always be an England ’ and waving a tattered Union Jack over the hedge in defiance .
14 He hummed softly ‘ There 'll always be an England ’ and joked as he shifted the weight of his rucksack ‘ as if on a walking holiday ’ .
15 When Germans appeared on the west dockside , Bob Burtenshaw — still humming ‘ There 'll always be an England … ’ ran at them firing his pistol , despite his wounds .
16 But he 's my husband , and even if we do stray now and again , we 'll always be an item . ’
17 And then the war ended , and Vera Lyn sang ‘ There 'll always be an England ’ on the wireless .
18 He laughed now , saying , ‘ My dear , dear , Peggy , you 'll always be the same to me .
19 However , there will always be a pause of at least one minute between successive stages .
20 Mr Skinner insisted : ‘ There will always be a need for socialism , whether in Britain or anywhere else , so long as there are millionaires living in the lap of luxury and other people living in cardboard boxes , so long as we have a system which allows the poor countries of the world to hand over $50m to the rich . ’
21 Do you think that at a time like this I am afraid of words ? … if he dies tonight there will always be a gulf at my side , a gulf into which I must never fall ’ ( p. 87 ) .
22 ‘ However professional the police and Customs are , there will always be a way through . ’
23 In the meantime , as Bernard says : ‘ England may not have the World Cup , but at least in my fair English blazer pocket there will always be a part of it . ’
24 Racing : Nijinsky 's speed will always be a lasting memory
25 Wherever you go , there will always be a mountain gasthaus somewhere close at hand to keep you fed and watered .
26 If what Pascal , Butler , Newman and Browning say is true , then there will always be a degree of uncertainty about whether God exists that reflects an absence of proof .
27 While there will always be a place for human intelligence ( Humint ) , past experience suggests that MI6 is unable to produce anything that remotely justifies its annual cost .
28 To the Russians he will always be a traitor and therefore suspect and under surveillance in case he tries to re-defect so he can not leave Russia , his letters will be censored , and telephone calls bugged .
29 This will always be a conflict .
30 I mention this struggle within the ‘ profession ’ because whenever some particularly disgraceful scandal occurs , such as the New Mills dispersal , or the dispersal at Brent , there will always be a tendency to blame the ‘ professional ’ involved .
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