Example sentences of "but [pron] will [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | But they will just as surely have died because they were too weak in political muscle to be able to fight back . |
32 | With their lithe bodies , they can follow rabbits down burrows and chickens into coops , but they will just as readily deal with carrion such as a dead lamb . |
33 | Well-respected older male broadcasters like David Jacobs and Robert Dougall may continue to get the opportunity to host programmes aimed particularly at older people , but they will no longer present mainstream programmes . |
34 | I suspect that it will involve largely the same personnel , but they will no longer be on the strength of Her Majesty 's inspectorate and will work for the funding council responsible for further education and sixth form colleges . |
35 | Many LEAs which have considered ‘ curriculum protection ’ arguments , during a decade of falling rolls , will bear witness to that thesis , but they will also honestly point out that in the face of budgetary imperatives , the purity of the curriculum protection policies has been compromised , and even whole schemes deferred or abandoned . |
36 | But they will still usually be only the party faithful , so he will find himself preaching to the converted . |
37 | But they will almost certainly have friends and perhaps relatives who are still church members who can be approached to discover the real reasons for their departure . |
38 | And he would be the right one to b be on this because I mean he 's so intelligent , he would but he wo n't even I think he must of turned that tape on yesterday . |
39 | The Secretary of State has power to allow a longer period for the giving of a notice of appeal but he will not normally be prepared to exercise this power unless there are special circumstances which excuse the delay in giving notice of appeal . |
40 | But he will not yet be either , since he will not , at that stage have been ‘ entered on the register ’ and , it may be that he never will be . |
41 | A person may have sure and sufficient reasons for coming to believe , but he will not always have similar substantiation in every field at every moment . |
42 | But he will no longer be the rude , racist chap he used to be . |
43 | But he will still probably spend 15 hours a day or more ‘ banged up ’ in his cell in the 150-year-old Victorian jail . |
44 | But it wo n't necessarily be , erm , an a some language taken from a historical period . |
45 | IBM will keep its retirement bridge , which allows employees that are within five years of retirement to take unpaid leave until they 're eligible to retire with full benefits , but it will no longer provide benefits during the leave , or include employees ' unpaid time in any of its length of service benefits . |
46 | All this may bring stability to Albania , but it will not necessarily encourage the ruling Democrats to become more democratic . |
47 | But it will not necessarily begin 12 months before . |
48 | ‘ For these reasons I think there is a fairly strong case for marketing it as a health product but it will also probably be considered a luxury , ’ Mrs Rowan added . |
49 | If the following sequence is carried out with sensitivity , not only will it relieve tension but it will also effectively stimulate clarity of thought . |
50 | This is even more of a problem : it will not only damage the perspective of the learner but it will also effectively bar him from experience of the full language , since the native users will be unwilling to use it in his presence . |
51 | Like the checks in Hofmann 's pianos , it will dissipate some of the energy of the returning hammer but it will never completely exclude the possibility of the hammer bouncing . |