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Example sentences for "will mean"

  • It will mean a good deal; but it will mean everything I'd rather it didn't mean if the success is owing to her.

  • If we send in a lot of fish to-morrow it will mean a straight run over Sunday.

  • It will mean work to clear by to-morrow noon and every minute is going to count.

  • It will mean a scrap with Mascola too, unless I miss my guess," put in McCoy.

  • Should the young cannery owner succeed, it will mean much to the people of Port Angeles in reducing the high cost of living.

  • It will mean that we shall have to see that the sins of pride, which God will show us, made it necessary for Jesus to come from heaven and die on the Cross that they might be forgiven.

  • It will mean a constant yielding to those around us, for our yieldedness to God is measured by our yieldedness to man.

  • It will mean no plans, no time, no money, no pleasure of our own.

  • Yes, dear, if you will let Olga help you to get rid of your fear of the water, it will mean more to her even than to you.

  • You can't begin to know what it will mean to her.

  • But, good Lord, man, think what it will mean to me?

  • It will mean," said Drew, apparently thinking aloud, "that the guilt of murder does not fall on Anthony.

  • It will mean that he has enough reserve strength to fight off the shock of the wound and survive the loss of the blood.

  • Think what it will mean to me if I am discovered; think what it will mean even if I succeed.

  • Ah, Maitre Gabriel, if you knew how much your care will mean to us, you would make no apologies.

  • I know what it will mean to those two poor women, and I know what it will mean to you, for of course the salary will come out of your pocket.

  • It will mean a scrap, too, like none of us ever saw, and I was raised in a logging-camp where fighting is the general recreation.

  • Tom, have you thought of what it will mean, not to me, but to Christine?

  • It will mean so much to him, and, in the end, so much to you and yours.

  • Let us see what it will mean to give precedence to faith over reason when we are working in the realm of spiritual truth.

  • It will mean that =believing= will precede =reasoning= in our approach to the Word of God, and this defines the vital distinction between the true Christian and the rationalist.

  • Let us now see what it will mean to accord primacy to the spiritual realm over the natural.

  • Just think what it will mean if we really do something big with old C.

  • The time may come when Danny will mean more to you than he does to me.

  • Think what it will mean if the escorting vessel in every convoy should be able in the future to listen as we did today while the wolf-pack moves in!

  • As for the younger generation--they're fine, every one of them; and just think what this money will mean to them in education and advantages!

  • Yes, I know, it will mean a good deal to them, of course.

  • I think, perhaps, we may reach the result quicker if we call it mankind's new and higher pleasure or happiness, for that is what it will mean.

  • It will mean much to me, Gloria, if you will.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "will mean" 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:
    doing right; will attend; will denounce; will dissolve; will forgive; will just; will laugh; will learn; will look; will lose; will march; will pass over you; will place; will pour; will promise; will rejoice; will shew; will shoot; will sleep; will speake; will surely; will teach; will tell you the; will tell you why; will treat; will usually