Example sentences of "will be [verb] as " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The effects will be nullified as long as it operates .
2 But , outclassed and outnumbered , most will be destroyed as soon as they take to the air ; and if they do not take to the air they do not matter .
3 ‘ From now on , the infant will be reared as I explained , and not for at least twenty years will we be able to report in much detail on the results of our investigations , although preliminary papers will be published in the professional press from time to time .
4 Moreover the sequence of events will be understood as happening adjacently in time and situated adjacently in place .
5 This team will be extended as necessary and will be increased significantly once the canvas exercise commences .
6 Decisions that fall outside the parameters of ‘ ordinary ’ unreasonableness may give rise to liability , but those indicating a lesser degree of ineptitude will be categorised as merely imprudent , or as involving an error of judgment , and will , accordingly , be safe from attack .
7 Enquiries will be made as to cancellation costs , but already a cake has been baked as a raffle prize , the proceeds of which will be donated to the Octagon Club .
8 Finally an assessment will be made as to the effect of redistribution of land reform to agricultural productivity .
9 Both motivation and emotion will be analysed as processes concerned with the control of human action .
10 The inter-establishment variation in relative wages will be analysed as will be the decomposition of the differential in weekly pay into that in hourly pay and that in the number of hours worked per week .
11 Since the to infinitive , as just seen , expresses a non-realized event in these uses , it will be analysed as involving an initial interception of to , as with try diagrammed above .
12 If the zone is out of balance , a tenderness or pain will be felt as pressure is applied .
13 By working the hard material between one 's fingers , the transition from glass to rubber will be felt as the sample warms up .
14 All pilot proposals will be evaluated as to the contribution they will make to the Development Programme and , in the case of colleges without a Validation Procedures Agreement ( for details of this see UPDATE 1 ) , proposals will be considered by Scrutiny Panels set up by SCOTVEC .
15 While the media will report the pros and cons , it needs to be persuaded that one view is the correct one , since through the media 's attitude , people will be influenced as to whether abolition is a good or bad policy .
16 This new road will be constructed as advance works for the Musselburgh Bypass project and will be funded from savings in costs resulting from the closure of Mucklets Road .
17 Where the education and training they have received is substantially the same as that in the member states to which they wish to move , their qualifications will be recognised as equivalent .
18 It is the intention that gradually academic and vocational qualifications will be recognised as of equal status and barriers in perception will be removed .
19 So the political maturity of the Federal Republic and its institutions will be tested as never before .
20 If in refusing , he acted as a reasonable man would have done in the same position , because he entertained the same fears , having regard to the character of the proposed assignee , etc , the real purpose of the assignment , the effect of the assignment on the property or other property of the landlord , etc , the refusal will be upheld as reasonable .
21 Other things being equal , there is a greater chance that the original decision will be upheld as having a rational basis , even if the interpretation is not the precise one which the court itself would have chosen .
22 Our pattern will be displayed as we originally designed it in the Fair Isle option , but we are about to make some changes .
23 Some will be recognized as being of architectural and historic value , but there are others of more modest appearance which would nevertheless be sorely missed if they disappeared .
24 The context of the discourse of anthropology provides constraints on the form of a statement that will be recognized as meaningful .
25 Some of the points that follow are re-phrased from L. C. Taylor 's summary ( Taylor 1972 , pp. 156–7 ) , while others will be recognized as emerging from the arguments of Chapters I and 2 .
26 Again there will be no loss of existing rights of audience ; solicitors will be recognized as having competence to be advocates in the lower courts .
27 The scale of the exercise will be seen as confirming suspicions that the number of security force personnel involved in collusion is substantial .
28 In history they will be seen as trapped , important and the most sensational and magnificent rock'n'roll failure ever .
29 However , this will be seen as being an accounting/commercial exercise and will be in a very different form from the RMI .
30 After analysis , these strategies will be seen as having their own associated difficulties .
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