Example sentences of "it will [adv] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 It will either burn or heal him , and it is here one feels the evening has begun ; that here is the enquiry that needs to deepen .
2 Never be tempted to leave the dog off the leash , hoping that it will simply sit until you emerge from the shop .
3 Even where such process does not demonstrate the incompatibility of the firms seeking a merger it will frequently happen that the actual merger will need to be delayed for an agreed period so as to phase in the new arrangements .
4 To give you time , should you need to agree the details with others , we will normally hold your holiday choice until the close of business on the following working day , when it will automatically lapse unless you instruct your travel agent to confirm the booking to us .
5 The term abandoned is not defined in the Act but it will clearly apply where a person caring for a child has left without indicating his intention to return or making arrangements for the child 's care in his absence .
6 In time it will just disappear and no one will ever know . ’
7 So it will just mean that on those cases , on approximately forty , their arrears letter will be going out a couple of weeks late .
8 It will also mean that you do not have scope for considering all the potential alternatives thoroughly before making your final selection .
9 It will also mean that Ulster patients will no longer have to be sent to English hospitals for heart operations in a bid to shorten the waiting list .
10 It will also mean that prices of lustre pottery will rocket upwards — a good thing if you have some , but not so good for those collectors just starting out .
11 Today 's Law Lords judgement should keep Bridget O'Brien in her house , it will also mean that in future , a wife or partner only agrees to mortgage their home as security for a loan after being fully informed of the possible consequences .
12 It will also illuminate and extend our understanding of the ways in which the social institutions of law and welfare interact with the family .
13 For example , while sexual dimorphism in size is likely to evolve where variation in male success is greater than female success and a given increment in body size has the same effect on breeding success in both sexes , it will also evolve if variation in reproductive success is similar in both sexes but size has a greater influence on success in males or even if variation in success is greater in females but the effects of size are greater among males .
14 It will also ensure that economic farmers are enabled to compete throughout the world .
15 It will also ensure that it has a broad base and that the business rate is decentralised .
16 It will also ensure that decisions which affect our members are made by the activists employed by within the appropriate sections and industries .
17 It will also ensure that the ownership of the Northern TV stations will stay in the North , for the foreseeable future at least .
18 It will also help if the players can hit the iron shots a little higher than usual to enable them to stop the ball on the firm greens .
19 It will also come when manufacturers respond to the competitive advantages conferred by devaluation , and last longer if manufacturers can contain the inevitable increases in costs of imported goods and materials .
20 It will also import and export a good range of standard formats .
21 It will also supply and erect fencing and trellis , and design and construct a new garden on an old site .
22 It will dramatically affect whether sites are developed or not , ’ he predicts .
23 It will eventually happen and when it does it will be like a release valve .
24 Here oak is useful , because it does n't mind being soaked in water all winter , although it will probably split as it dries out in summer .
25 Because if we actually can address th those real concerns , you know , you know the point that brother just made about why should he leave you to join unison try and crystallize that out in a Northumberland way , if that 's possible , it may not be , it may be difficult on , on a short punchy A five leaflet it will probably service because I mean it c it can be photocopied , there 's nothing wonderful , I mean it does n't have to be sort of the most wonderful printing techniques and giving them desktop publishing .
26 The reason for this in turn is quite straightforward : in any language which makes a distinction between nouns and adjectives , it will be natural to use an adjective when assignment of a property is required ; it may sometimes be quite easy to find an adjective and a noun which express near enough — or even exactly — the same properties , and differ only in that one is an adjective and the other is a noun , but to use the latter for assignment is to risk conveying the unwanted imputation of " entity-hood " on top of the semantic value required ( see Section 1.10 ) ; therefore when a noun or noun phrase is chosen it will normally presuppose that the construction is not that of assignment of a property but instead one of equation .
27 If you can put yourself in the other person 's shoes and think about how they might feel , it will certainly help if you let them know that .
28 The reason for the distinction may be obscure , but it will seldom arise since once the agreement is before the court it is open to the scrutiny of the court in all its surrounding circumstances as a question of law .
29 Moreover , the strength of the kink is so low that it will often fail when the glider is only just off the ground .
30 However , in a non-trivial system it will often happen that one reading of a sentence will be preferable on , say , syntactic grounds , but another will allow easier pronoun resolution .
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