Example sentences of "[adv] will probably " in BNC.
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1 | Much will probably depend upon whether you are complaining about a single , unequivocal act , such as suspension in breach of your contract , in which event you ought to respond rapidly , or something such as a gradual change in your status , which may require prolonged consideration . |
2 | You should not let a rift with a subordinate widen to such an extent ; to do so will probably call your managerial qualities into question . |
3 | The regression alone will probably have raised enough points for the patient to consider during the ensuing period without him having any other work to do . |
4 | All in all , this is a valuable stage which researchers who do not accept criticism very easily will probably wish to avoid , but if they do consciously and deliberately avoid it , they have only themselves to blame for not taking advantage of a most useful and quite inexpensive step in schedule preparation . |
5 | ‘ And people who tan easily will probably do themselves less harm . ’ |
6 | ‘ Modernizing has , however , recently spoiled many of these buildings , and a few years more will probably see them pared and plaistered into all the monotony of the erections of the present day . ’ |
7 | He also has to learn not to watch his feet , because bending his head downwards will probably increase his spasticity , and make him more likely to fall . |
8 | That is one reason why many consumer-goods firms which reckon all they need to do is cut prices temporarily will probably be proved wrong . |
9 | According to Lazaris , fear is highly repetitive ; our greatest fears now will probably be the same fears we had ten or twenty years ago , and even many lifetimes ago . |
10 | Sarah favours Kylie at the moment , while Tom is keen on Michelangelo , which in a few years from now will probably mean a painter again rather than a Ninja Turtle . |
11 | Just how well will probably depend on the temperature . |
12 | But once this absurdity is made clear , many of us today will probably find that extreme individualism , when thus exposed in its full aridity , is not a heritage that we want to claim . |
13 | The money you save on a hyped discount today will probably have to be passed on to the car 's next buyer as well , although discounts you negotiate privately may not be . |
14 | ‘ For smaller businesses , the American Express card today will probably cost less than other cards and will certainly not be higher than a bank card . |
15 | it is part of the problem we have and I will say no more as I suspect our report of today will probably be in the daily press . |
16 | Erm , income support , housing benefit , family credits , maternity expenses , cold weather payment , there 's a whole host of means tested benefits which most people here will probably believe are reasonable to be means tested . |
17 | If they gave in to our tantrums , our child within will probably manifest itself in a negative , rather than a positive , fashion . |
18 | Yet Russians with bank accounts abroad will probably be among the most reluctant to believe that theory can be turned into practice . |
19 | If the key person identified for the transfer does not want to move there will probably be a number of career-hungry individuals on the payroll who will willingly step into the vacant position . |
20 | Should a great little family bother to visit there will probably not be room for another one . |
21 | Changes in these attitudes and practices will be the result of a long political process which will certainly take more than a century to work out , and even then will probably compress the time which it took Europe to work through comparable processes . |
22 | And since most visitors have time only for one visit to Milford , you again will probably have to be make this trip as a passenger , either in an aircraft or a coach . |
23 | If it is your own mother who is bereaved , the fact that you are grieving too will probably help you both a good deal , as you will be able to share your sorrow and comfort each other ; though in some families shared sorrow occasionally leads to friction and unreasonable apportioning of blame for trivial or imagined omissions in the course of the terminal illness of the deceased . |