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Example sentences for "will have"

  • Then I will have no victuals,' says I, again very innocently; 'let me but live with you.

  • I won't say that I will have her; how can I resolve that point, when you see I cannot have her without your consent?

  • We will have no accursed lawyers and their sheep-skins here!

  • The next thing is to find the stone head, and then, I think, I will have my bearings.

  • If we go, it will have to be in an airship, for in no other way, I think, can we come upon the place, as it is closely guarded.

  • Well, I predict that we will have a bad storm," insisted Mr. Parker, and Tom could not help wishing that the scientist would keep his gloomy forebodings to himself.

  • I am in hopes that it will have an eruption while we are here.

  • There were some reports came in after we left," said Clay, "and I find I will have to see Kirkland to-morrow morning.

  • Come, we will have to run for our lives now.

  • And Cousin Dorothy says we will have such a lovely time!

  • We will have to take the long wagon," said Bert, as they began to count up the baskets.

  • If the treasury makes nothing out of the postal service, it will have to increase the tax on salt; if the tax on salt be lifted also, it will have to throw the burden back upon drinks; there would be no end to this litany.

  • I will intervene in their exploitation, I will have my share of the products, and land monopoly shall be respected.

  • If he is not at the entrance give your card to the outside porter; he will have it sent up to Fred's apartments.

  • But I cannot gather experience for you, it will have to grow in your own garden.

  • I will have no such childish nonsense in my house.

  • If I buy the place, for of course it will have to be sold, he is welcome to remain at Rawdon Court.

  • I will have a man's whole heart, and not fragments and finger-ends of it.

  • The priest replies, "I will go if thou wilt go with me; for then I will have confidence, if I should require advice.

  • But I will have my own counsel followed, and will not run hastily into Bjorn's or any other man's measures, in such a highly important matter.

  • And if Gold Harald persists in his demand, I will have no hesitation in having him killed; for I will not trust him if he does not renounce it.

  • I will have no shred of responsibility; it is my single endeavour to avoid the same," cried Sir William.

  • Well, all this I resign; I care not if I die, and the world never hear of me; I care only for one thing, and that I will have.

  • In so little a while, I, and the English language, and the bones of my descendants, will have ceased to be a memory!

  • The indiscretion is what stops me; but if I keep on feeling as I feel just now it will have to be written.

  • As for the adventurer, I believe he will have a delightful voyage for his little start in life.

  • He proceeded to the Mexican capital without our consent and I will have to consider the matter very carefully before indorsing him.

  • What a lot we will have to tell each other.

  • This will be easily understood when we realize that the surface of a flying machine should be laid out in proportion to the amount of weight it will have to sustain.

  • The man who has ridden a bicycle or motorcycle around curves at anything like high speed, will have a very good idea as to the principle of maintaining equilibrium in an airship.

  • The chances are that several alterations, prompted by the results of trials, will have to be made.

  • But that means that I can't go to--that I will have to teach this winter, if I can get a city grade or a country school.

  • I will have them to-morrow," and gripped her desk for support for she knew that was not true.

  • It will have to do until the dress is finished.

  • We will have to hunt beside the roads and around the edge of the Limberlost to-day," said Elnora.

  • Whoever does it will have to hang me, too," he cried.

  • For every doit of the account, as I often say, will have to be settled one day, as sure as God lives.

  • Downing Street, if it cannot bethink itself of returning to the veracities, will have to vanish altogether!

  • He will have to lie there till he has thrown up the twelve ships of Mark the Rich which he swallowed.

  • Then I will have to do my plowing by a heidlicht, so I can fish as much as ye do in the day time.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "will have" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    dark line; falling short; growing from; play cards; will accomplish; will away; will become; will confess; will exchange; will form; will judge the world; will make the land; will manage; will not hang myself; will not hearken unto; will present; will rain; will require; will rest; will secure; will seem; will spread; will surely; will tell you the; will wager; will were