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

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1 The next day the horse will be more confident and walk in further .
2 Her grief will be particularly hard to ‘ work through ’ , for to some extent it may always be open-ended .
3 They assume implicitly that over this short-term horizon the supply side will be approximately constant .
4 The opposition will be particularly upset by a proposal , also announced on Thursday , to send Japanese military aircraft to the Middle East to move refugees , which it calls ‘ evacuees ’ , to Asia .
5 This offset will be easily detectable in calm air since the helicopter will turn slowly round .
6 Of course my piece will be very different from Valerie 's : I would n't want you to think there was duplication : that we were taking up your time unnecessarily .
7 Human beings may become redundant , but the penis will be more essential than it has ever been .
8 Roots of wheat which have been stunted by excessive water in spring will be less able to withstand a summer drought .
9 If the freefall had gone better on Sunday then we would have been untouchable by this stage , but as it is the French are still ver close and their shooting will be very good .
10 But though high interest rates will achieve an economic slowdown , they will also ensure that the inevitable devaluation of the pound will be more severe .
11 But though high interest rates will achieve an economic slowdown , they will also ensure that the inevitable devaluation of the pound will be more severe .
12 The library of the future will be very different from current examples .
13 The corporation of the future will be essentially female in character .
14 They are encouraged to do ‘ worry work ’ , to ask questions about what is going to happen , to weep if they feel like it , to ask for and get reassurance that the future will be all right ; different but all right .
15 Of course not all of the elderly of the future will be relatively affluent , and , to repeat , we need to be alert to inequalities among the elderly — between age cohorts and within them : the cohorts who will be bringing more occupational pensions and owner-occupied houses into old age will also bring in experience of early retirement and early run-down of resources due to unemployment .
16 I think the solution here is , a , a , a , and er future will be totally unbalanced .
17 The years of closure will be very busy ones , and at the end of them the building will have been returned to sound condition , and the garden restored , for the commencement of Waddesdon 's second hundred years .
18 It hopes his experience of continental football will be particularly valuable .
19 Any British secondary school head , deputy head or head of department will be acutely conscious that his or her work will ultimately be judged and validated by examination grades .
20 Environmental groups are concerned that the new department will be less capable than the White House Council on Environmental Quality , which Clinton wants to disband , of enforcing the National Environmental Protection Act and mediating disputes between federal agencies over environmental issues .
21 In these circumstances the department will be potentially vulnerable to subjective ( and possibly erroneous ) views on its performance .
22 The switch will be more drastic than that from black-and-white to colour television , for the old services will not be receivable on the new equipment .
23 The result will be that Hungarian writers will get forgotten outside Hungary . ’
24 The result will be less effective than would be achieved by a teacher in harmony with the unit ; indeed the contribution of the unit may have , on balance , been destructive .
25 ‘ The Mayor will be most gratified to see you . ’
26 Road-cleaning will be quite automatic too .
27 Commonly the prescriber will be fairly familiar with the remedies and will ‘ just know ’ the remedy as the case is taken or may only need to look up one or two symptoms to confirm the remedy .
28 Thirty minutes is usually sufficient for an interview , but allow an hour or even more if the appointment is a high-powered one and the interview will be very searching .
29 Whether it is something as special as a wedding bouquet or as simple as a few flowers gathered on a picnic outing together , knowing where and when the flowers were picked or used adds a great deal to the meaning of the picture , and the recipient will be very touched at your thoughtful and generous gesture .
30 This chapter will be principally concerned with the judicial constraints imposed upon the Y level .
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