Example sentences of "[noun] will [be] " in BNC.

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1 The new scale will assign an arbitrary mean score to those children with average scores , and children performing above and below the mean will be assigned higher and lower scores on the new scale .
2 The new National Certificate in Greenkeeping will be recognised for entry to this HNC .
3 Between 150 and 175 new dams will be needed .
4 When the churches are gone religion will be simply all in the mind
5 The meaning of ‘ the capacity to enjoy life ’ within the Alternative Religion will be enlarged upon in the final chapter of this book .
6 Close to the end of his life , Vincent referred approvingly to Tolstoy 's My Religion , and spoke of his hopes for a ‘ private and secret revolution in men from which a new religion will be born … something altogether new which will have no name , but will have the same effect of comforting , of making life possible , which the Christian religion used to have … ’ .
7 At a fairly basic level , sociologists of religion will be interested in finding out how many people are members of the different religious faiths ( or of none ) ; how many people attend a place of worship ( and with what frequency ) ; how many people are joining ( or leaving ) the ministry ; how many churches , synagogues , chapels , temples , mosques there are .
8 In the future religion will be changed slightly and the Bible ( or any other religious texts ) will be translated into more modern meaning but the main themes will still carry on .
9 The speed will then be dangerously low by the time that the nose has been lowered , and even more speed will be lost during the descent through the wind gradient .
10 My opinion is that , as long as Willsford is among the leaders coming to the last two fences and six furlongs , his speed will be a potent weapon , especially as he carries the minimum weight .
11 After eight seconds the wings will be horizontal and forward speed will be about 100 mph .
12 I think next season will tell , Strach 's will probably too old by then and Macca and Speed will be unable to cope with the loss of these two players .
13 If your body language , eyes , mouth , expression and voice contradict the words you are saying , the words will be meaningless and even counter-productive .
14 The same words will be said very differently by Romeo when discussing the future schedule with Juliet .
15 If at the same time the adult says , ‘ Look ’ or , ‘ What 's this ? ’ it seems plausible that the words will be interpreted by the child in terms of the communicative acts they accompany — that is , as ‘ attention-getters ’ and devices for locating conversational topics .
16 If a lexicon contains many words which occur rarely or never in the input material , this will introduce costs of storage and search , although if a lexicon is too small , words will be rejected .
17 In other words , the more ’ everyday ’ a domain is , the more ’ everyday ’ its constituent words will be , and the more they fit into stereotypical patterns of usage that are quoted as examples in the dictionary definitions .
18 We find that a proportion of these definition words will be relevant to the domain of banking ( as defined by membership of the domain wordlist ) , whilst the remainder will not ( or have negligible relevance ) .
19 The letters and words will be recognised — they are handled by automatised component subskills — but the meanings of the words are not assembled into the ideas which the author has attempted to express .
20 Dogmatic training techniques using only phonics or only sight vocabulary will result in restricted flexibility , and the processing of new or unfamiliar words will be impeded .
21 The computer totals the number of responses and the correct answers ; then when the child can supply no more words a full list of all possible words will be displayed , with the child 's answers in colour .
22 But , but the words will be in , the clarification needs to be for
23 In applying this rule the words of the statute will be interpreted according to their natural , ordinary and grammatical meaning , but where such an interpretation produces a manifestly absurd result , the words will be interpreted so as to avoid the absurdity .
24 Short notes here and there will indicate the path that the lecturer has taken through the study , but words will be few and blank spaces many .
25 How do you think the words will be spoken ?
26 Hence common words will be more rapidly identified or produced than uncommon words , and also a word which has been presented previously will be more rapidly identified than one which has not .
27 Thus , in the example shown in Figure 11 , all detectors for words beginning with an R will receive excitatory inputs from the letter detector level , while detectors for all other words will be completely switched off by inhibition .
28 Therefore , words will be reported better than single letters , i.e. there will be a word-superiority effect .
29 The pattern of pitch which accompanies the first clause or group of words will be recognised by an English listener as in some way complete and it will hold it together as a separate unit and separate it from the following clause , which will also be held together by intonation .
30 Clear and plain words will be given their clear meaning .
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