Example sentences of "but [pron] will [adv] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | But nothing will never get no better until it clicks |
2 | But nothing will more unite MPs of all parties than outrage over a Minister who lies in the sacred Commons chamber . |
3 | But nothing will really be solved until we have a government with the moral courage to ban driving entirely . |
4 | But nothing will ever make up for Amar for the total loss of mother , father , entire family , house and everything . |
5 | It has never , of course , been my privilege to have seen such things at first hand , but I will nevertheless hazard this with some confidence : the English landscape at its finest — such as I saw it this morning — possesses a quality that the landscapes of other nations , however more superficially dramatic , inevitably fail to possess . |
6 | But I will tomorrow . |
7 | It would take too much space to list them all , but I will just mention one by name and that is Miss Phyllis Ratcliffe . |
8 | I will no longer be there , he wrote , but I will no longer be needed . |
9 | When the issue is not of a split in attitudes ( " I will compete but I will also borrow and lend " ) the head is unlikely to find enthusiasm or coercion an appropriate tool of management . |
10 | He had the arrogance and the charisma of a Bob Stanford-Tuck or Doug Bader , but I will also add that he had that indefinable something that was an essential ingredient in an outstanding bomber pilot . |
11 | But I will nonetheless now you 've |
12 | Unfortunately I am completely tied up with filming during the whole of June but I will certainly make the effort to visit you some time in July . |
13 | I should like to check on that before replying specifically to my hon. Friend , but I will certainly write to him . |
14 | I would rather not answer across the Floor of the House the serious point that the hon. Member has raised , but I will certainly look into it and come back to him . |
15 | ‘ Not to you , young man , ’ she shouted , ‘ but I will certainly have something to say to John Major . ’ |
16 | Er , Madam Speaker I 'm very much aware of the case that the my honourable friend has er mentioned because he has written to me er about it and I have looked into the circumstances er of it and I understand that the employment service have made no final decision on that particular site and I 'd be happy to respond to my honourable friend er once I 've had a chance to discuss it further with the Chief Executive of the employment service whose responsibility it is but if I could just say to my honourable friend the principle of integrating er the work of the job centre and the payment of benefits on one site is a good one which is for the convenience of er people who make use of the job centres er and er as er er the honourable er gentleman , the member for Workington is indicating from a sedentary position , was a recommendation which was supported by the public accounts er committee and I believe and I believe that it er makes sense to proceed on a value for money basis with this policy but I will certainly look at the particular example in my honourable friend 's constituency with interest . |
17 | Er the Noble Baroness is is right erm we do notice that where a consultant is in charge the difference is very great indeed , I 'm afraid I do n't have the figure but I will certainly give it to her , er but also we know that where there are er hospital discharge managers where senior nurses are bed managers , the difference is really quite considerable er and that is what I was saying in terms of managing the process . |
18 | But I will always appreciate Faith 's kindness . ’ |
19 | Surrounded by Christmas decorations John said : ‘ She was in an awful state but I will always remember her as a lovable child . ’ |
20 | ‘ But I will always stand by him , whether he is right or wrong — in this case I think he was tucked up just a bit . ’ |
21 | I should have been the hero of the game but I will always be known as the one who lost it . |
22 | ‘ I ca n't even remember the name of the horse that won it for me in Italy , but I will always have a special spot for Nicer , ’ he said . |
23 | But I will never allow subtitles on the film itself . |
24 | But I will never forgive them for covering it up , ’ she told Edward Pilkington . |
25 | But I will never forget that time we both watched your father walking back and forth in front of the summerhouse , looking down at the ground as though he hoped to find some precious jewel he had dropped there . ’ |
26 | ‘ I will not give up comedy completely , but I will never go back to being a stand-up comic again . |
27 | When I started refereeing in the 1960s the props ' attitude was : ‘ I may go backwards in a scrummage , but I will never go down ’ . |
28 | Nowadays the attitude seems totally the opposite ; the modern-day prop appears to say : ‘ I may go down in the scrummage , but I will never go back ’ . |
29 | " You may invite him a hundred times , " said Honor tightly , " but I will never marry him . " |
30 | Whereupon he blew his top and declared , ‘ Well , I will not make the announcement , but I will never talk to you again ! ’ |