Example sentences of "as [pron] will " in BNC.

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1 Admissions staff say students should n't panic as no-one will lose a place .
2 And they say he will fashion any spell so long as someone will pay him enough . ’
3 That as his will he may do danger with . ’
4 And I slept most of today , as I 'll be up all night , with the stops . ’
5 Please pray for me as I 'll need all the support I can get .
6 ‘ Well , it 's as far as I 'll go . ’
7 That 'll change on the next record as I 'll have a say in the writing . ’
8 It was a smashing walk on a beautiful day and sitting listening to the bands playing in the sunshine was as near to heaven as I 'll probably ever get .
9 Yeah I would class myself as a recovered anorexic , but as recovered as I 'll ever be !
10 Sorry to lay this on you , not fair I know as I 'll probably be right as rain by the time you get this .
11 ‘ I like them all , but liking is as far as I 'll get — have you seen the prices ? ’
12 As I 'll ever be . ’
13 The contributions to this issue have been mainly from the London staff but this should be more balanced next issue as I 'll be chasing you lot in Canterbury for contributions .
14 Akhenaten either died or was murdered , we 're not , we do n't know , we do n't know how er he was a very peculiar man as I 'll explain in the lectures er physically , very strange probably as a result of inbreeding and erm the old religion re-established itself there was never a return to monotheistic sun worship , but er all its hypothesis is that , that since we know the exodus occurred round about this time and since we know that Judaism too is a religion of a single-minded monotheist you know I 'm the law by God I shall have no other gods before me , it says in the Bible full stop .
15 Erm Freud 's hypothesis is that this religion left Egypt because of the persecution , Moses was one of Akhenaten 's followers who went out into the desert , erm here as I 'll explain in the lectures er some of my own research opens up a new angle on this that Freud did n't know about and why they went out into the desert , why they picked up these er Hebrew erm er immigrants who were living on the fringes of the Egyptian Empire .
16 As well as I 'll ever know he replied gruffly .
17 As ready as I 'll ever be .
18 oh I do n't want pigeon looks as I 'll have to clean the brasses this week
19 Dragging the pad towards him he found a clean page and wrote : Dear Harsnet , I know you never answer my letters or return my calls , and I know that you handed over your notes to me on the understanding that I could do what I liked with them and not bother you , but I have to say that while there is much in them that I admire , as I will always admire much in you , no matter what , there is also much in them that seems to me to be puerile and , to put it mildly , bigoted .
20 Systems will simply not change as easily as Shapland and Hobbs seem to hope ; for police society is extremely conservative and masculine in outlook , and has long reflected the low esteem women are given in wider society , as I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4 .
21 If I find out different , I 'll kill you , as I will kill him ! ’
22 Secondly , as I will show , it is quite easy to imagine a self-organizing system which specifies the relative position of cells .
23 As I will show later , the child may play off that side of you that is exhausted and wishes to take the ‘ line of least resistance ’ , against that part of you that wishes to make a stand on an important matter of principle .
24 However , as I will show , there may be no consideration of way of life when decisions are made about the closure of particular schools .
25 ‘ As well as I will ever settle here . ’
26 Certainly , as I will argue later , ’ sport and show business constitute the two spheres in which blacks have made immense contributions and which seem to throw up figures with whom black kids tend to identify and on whom they model themselves .
27 As I will indicate , black sportsmen of distinction wield considerable influence , often unknown to them , and unwittingly act as lures for black kids , as Bill Richmond probably did in the late eighteenth century , not only in the United States , but in England too .
28 As I will suggest in chapter eight , the black sportsman sees sport not as a hobby , but as a central life interest , a sphere in which he might find scope for self-expression and a possible avenue out of his mundane , everyday existence .
29 And , although progress in conventional careers may not be regarded as achievable , clearly certain things are , as I will now show .
30 But a combination of factors , including a high proportion of broken or at least deteriorating homes and single-parent families , an absence of parent-child contact due to migration and possibly compounded by the necessity of devoting excessive time to earning a living and , as I will argue shortly , a distorted appreciation of the parent 's function vis-à-vis education crystallize to release the black youth from the influence of his parents and jettison him into a world in which his peers , with whom he shares the common experience of being black in a white society , are the dominant forces .
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