Example sentences of "shall [vb infin] [prep] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I understand from 's nephew that the electric convector in the sitting room is dead , and shall speak to about some kind of replacement , though there is of course the second convector in the bedroom which should suffice at this time of year .
2 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 ) .
3 Such cases I shall refer to as hybrid judicial review actions .
4 Those aspects of the context which are directly reflected in the text , and which need to be called upon to interpret the text , we shall refer to as activated features of context and suggest that they constitute the contextual framework within which the topic is constituted , that is , the topic framework .
5 The research was conducted in two water authorities which when necessary I shall refer to as the ‘ northern ’ and ‘ southern ’ authorities — adjectives simply chosen in the interests of anonymity .
6 What Marx here calls the ‘ division of labour in general ’ , I shall refer to as the division of labour by sectors or by branches , as appropriate .
7 What he calls the ‘ division of labour in particular ’ , I shall refer to as the division of labour by enterprises , or enterprise-groups , as appropriate .
8 SIR STEPHEN BROWN P. This is an application by a health authority for a declaration to authorise the surgeons and staff of a hospital to carry out an emergency caesarean operation upon a patient , who I shall refer to as ‘ Mrs. S. ’
9 August is the launch month for HarperCollins paperbacks — or , to be more precise , August is the month when Fontana and Grafton cease to exist , amalgamating under the one imprint , which I shall refer to as HCP and in my mind will always call Collins .
10 Clearly , there is very great diversity , ranging from sporadic protests , riots and rebellions or coups d'état , to the more continuous activities of organized political parties , but most of these phenomena can , I think , be subsumed under two broad categories which I shall refer to as ‘ social movements ’ and ‘ organized political formations ’ .
11 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 .
12 Into the vacancy in men 's minds left by the retreat of the centennial myths of Christianity , crept strange cults and substitute faiths , some of which we shall look at in chapter ten .
13 Which spirit was responsible for inspiring his prophecies we shall look at in Chapter 13 .
14 We shall begin where most constitutional accounts begin with the development of the nineteenth-century constitution , but we shall look at in the context of the balanced constitution that it replaced .
15 These are the sorts of questions to which we have at least partial answers , and which I shall look at in this section .
16 For reasons we shall look at in Chapter 9 , it proved almost impossible to limit monetary growth to these target ranges and yet inflation still fell .
17 In a scale of authoritarianism ( an example we shall look at in Chapter 4 ) , a large number of items designed to produce responses that might be judged more or less " authoritarian " are devised .
18 The emergence of this question ( which I shall return to in subsequent chapters ) shows how an enquiry which seeks to provide a solution to one problem generates issues which , if taken up , can lead to a reconsideration of the problem .
19 Just what form such guidance might take is a question I shall return to in Chapter 4 .
20 He thus seems to doubt the realism of his own Realism — an apparent quirk which we shall return to in Chapter 4 , when discussing the relation of realistic description to methods of understanding by means of ideal types .
21 Through the use of these negatives ( engineering and maths ) , we can see students ' construction of an identity as ‘ physicist ’ : a person who is not too remote from reality , but who is at the same time capable of independent and abstract thought — a point we shall return to in Chapter 6 .
22 A further paragraph in this message in which the State Department gave its views on the proposal to hand-over the Cossacks we shall come to in Chapter Six , but in respect of the Yugoslavs the State Department was ruling that , whether they were Chetniks or not in conformity with agreed allied policy they should not be handed over and the Supreme Allied Commander was to be left in no doubt of the State Department 's view .
23 When we hear of a sustained flow of funds ‘ into ’ investment trusts , we must recognise that extra funds do not go into the trust at all ( except in one case we shall come to in a moment ) .
24 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 .
25 But the combined sub-text of my behaviour , which I shall deal with in the next chapter , shows that this was far from being the whole truth about my psychic state .
26 All of these descriptions of literacy practice , which I shall deal with in more detail below , suggest that attention to the ‘ interpersonal ’ , socially-conditioned aspects of literacy is central to understanding the nature of that practice .
27 Here we begin to approach the level of cohesion ( which we shall deal with in 11 ) , as well as the combination of clauses within sentences , and thus grammar , which is beyond the scope of this book .
28 However , by application of Hess 's law ( which we shall deal with in section 5.3 below ) it is possible to calculate them .
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