Compare Lucan's use of frons, nec frons erit ulla senatus, where it seems to mean boldness.
Elsewhere were written these two lines: "Quisquis amator erit Scythiæ licet ambulet oris: Nemo adeo ut feriat barbarus esse volet.
Reply of a bishop quoted by Gregory of Tours, 9, 33: quia sine consilio parentum eam coniugio copulasti, non erit uxor tua.
Quodcumque vinclis super terram strinxerit Erit in astris religatum fortiter; Et quod resolvit in terris arbitrio Erit solutum super coeli radium; In fine mundi judex erit saeculi.
Potentia conjuncta actui suo perfectior est quam non conjuncta: sed humana natura erit in beatis in maxima perfectione: ergo erunt ibi omnes sensus in suo actu.
Si ergo a corpore removeatur omne illud per quod actioni animæ resistit, simpliciter erit anima perfectior in tali corpore existens quam separata: quanto autem perfectius in esse, tanto perfectius potest operari.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "erit" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.