Example sentences of "but [pron] will n't [verb] a " in BNC.
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1 | But I wo n't use a weapon … ’ ) . |
2 | ‘ But I wo n't take a penny from you for visiting the Princess . ’ |
3 | But I wo n't breathe a word about them until after October the eleventh . ’ |
4 | ‘ But you wo n't last a week , ’ her tone was scathing . |
5 | I 'm going to clean your room and bring you your food , but you wo n't need a servant except for those things . ’ |
6 | I 'm going to tell her now , but she wo n't mind a bit , ’ said Breeze , as she hastily finished her letter and went in search of her sister . |
7 | Also at his star-studded birthday party , which cost £500,000 , were his two sisters , aged 10 and 11 — but they wo n't inherit a penny of their parents ' fortune . |
8 | another mistake in the film was to suggest that in a a short franchise , say of seven years they would need a great deal of working capital , but they wo n't need a great deal of working capital or or share capital , they will actually be running a business where they get subsidy , because if er they 're involving socially necessary lines , like commuter lines , or or rural lines , then we 've made it very clear er that the taxpayers subsidy will continue , because these are loss making businesses , they will be bid they will bid for subsidy , and they will continue to get that subsidy , so they will have the flow of whatever income they can increase , in the passenger franchise , plus the subsidy , plus , and this is a very important point in what we 're doing in the restructuring of British Rail , you see , nobody up till now has said that British Rail is perfect , everyone acknowledges that there are big improvements to be made , the way we 're structuring it will get those improvements because the smaller franchises , not the great big monolithic nationalized industry , the smaller units , ha will be able to identify much more clearly where they can make the savings and where they can increase the revenue . |
9 | But they wo n't need a bath or anything . |
10 | no but he wo n't have a mortgage . |
11 | It 's the poor old punter who pays the betting tax in stoppages from winning bets — but he wo n't get a penny . |
12 | ‘ I can guess what you want , but it wo n't take a couple of hours . ’ |
13 | Dublin may have a healthy homegrown vibe , but it wo n't produce a hybrid post-dance noise to compare with the messed up trance of , say , Happy Mondays . |