Example sentences of "[pron] we shall [verb] " in BNC.

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1 And then he will have to go he does n't have to go to London every day any more I we shall go here with with erm Philip and so on .
2 The three primary intellectual influences on the functionalist style which we shall examine are those of sociological positivism , evolutionary social theory , and pragmatism in philosophy .
3 Its most striking answer in International Relations has been systems theory , which we shall examine in the next chapter .
4 Reid ( 1978 ) argues that for curriculum problems the process of deliberation is required : a process described empirically by Walker ( 1975 ) , and which we shall examine further in Chapter 8 .
5 More recent theories , which we shall examine later , suggest that the idea of individuals being led is too passive and that the capacity for leadership may be in all of us .
6 The new classical macroeconomics , which we shall examine in greater detail in Chapter 7 , can , to a considerable extent , be viewed as a return to pre-Keynesian methods of analysis , particularly in their treatment of the operation of the labour market .
7 Lucas has advanced certain ingenious theoretical devices to explain the phenomenon of persistence which we shall examine later in this chapter .
8 For an ideal transformer we need to introduce a separate notation which we shall choose in the form shown in Fig. 4.10 .
9 The second reason why I feel that gradualism is the only means by which we shall achieve any kind of new vision for society and for the natural world has everything to do with the workings of democracy .
10 This was most clearly shown by Paul Dirac 's formulation of the general principles of quantum theory , of which we shall give some account in the following chapter .
11 This is the situation to which we shall give fullest consideration ( Section 22.5 ) .
12 The observations which we shall make can be directly linked to an account of the overall possibilities of English grammatical structure ; by this we do not mean to speak of the paradigmatic relationships between different clauses , but of the syntagmatic relations which construct the clause itself .
13 Hence Behaviouralism , the version of a more general behaviourism specific to International Relations , which we shall meet in the next chapter , is commonly spoken of as a Positive approach and often contrasted with Realism on this score .
14 ( vi ) On unc the relation R defined by ( a , b ) R ( c , d ) iff ad = bc is an equivalence relation of a kind which we shall meet again in the proof of 3.10.3 .
15 These two notions , which we shall explain shortly , have become increasingly important for current research on social mobility and social stratification , for both neo-Weberian and neo-Marxist sociologists ( see e.g. Murphy , 1986 ) .
16 British imperial and industrial success appeared unlimited , but in fact was already being compromised by long-term processes of economic and political change , which we shall outline in the next two sections .
17 Medical science was not yet equipped for investigation into near-death experiences , to which we shall refer in the final chapter ; almost the only form of resuscitation with which doctors were familiar was that following near-fatal immersion in water , accompanied , as it often is , by a rapid replay of the victim 's life .
18 However , deviation variables always allow us to reformulate the problem in the form outlined above , which we shall refer to as a Priority Goal Programming Problem ( PGP ) .
19 It was conceded by counsel for the defendant , necessarily and rightly , that the old offence of larceny by a trick is covered by section 1(1) of the Act of 1968 , as well as by section 15(1) to which we shall refer later , despite what may be called the apparent consent of the victim .
20 ( Though there are substantial deviations from this profile which we shall refer to below . )
21 The reason for this once again centres on the role played by the information set available to agents at the end of period t - 1 , which we shall refer to by the symbol .
22 He proposed an approach to the principled description of such contexts which bears a close resemblance to more recent descriptions which we shall go on to examine :
23 This is the sort of thing we want to discuss as we go through each of the areas which we shall do under matter one C.
24 by the big window , and with especially grand table which we shall paint incidentally paint the paint the er the carving there .
25 We do not seek a quick ‘ one-off ’ sale , after which we shall disappear from your life for ever .
26 The transnational view undeniably has a point , as do other recent views which we shall mention in a moment .
27 Timber , again , has a high work of fracture — about 10 4 J/m 2 — but this is produced by a totally different mechanism which we shall talk about in Chapter 6 .
28 Once established they underwent a number of evolutionary ‘ bursts ’ in which diverse kinds of reptiles occupied a variety of habitats , the most spectacular of which was the dinosaur radiation in the Mesozoic , to which we shall return later .
29 They will remain fundamental to our concern , and a basic issue to which we shall return at the end .
30 Daraprim ( pyrimethamine ) , a very different substance , evolved some years later from research of more general significance , to which we shall return in the next chapter .
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