Example sentences of "[vb infin] later " in BNC.

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1 Exploration drilling will commence later that year .
2 We still had to go on , in the way I shall describe later in this chapter , to deal with that aspect of treatment .
3 I shall describe later the hostile response to this demand , putting it into the context of sixteenth-century protest and rebellion .
4 This lack of appreciation was to have an adverse effect upon his stance in some of the debates in the 1920s ; something he came to realise and rectify later on .
5 I did , yes , erm , when erm , we thought our prisoner was finished the co-ordinators wrote to me and said would I be interested , would our group be interested in erm , writing to Yugoslavia 's still , because with the Civil War going on there 's lots of cases coming up , for example there was a whole hospital full of patients that were taken prisoner I do n't know if they were actually physically removed or whether they were held in the hospital without access to medical treatment for something like ten days , and erm , Saria did say she 'd help me last time and I wrote back and said yes , two of us could write once a month , well they 're taken that very liberally and , and , got two or three things from the already and erm , if anyone else is interested in writing an odd letter say once a month to Yugoslavia maybe they could erm , let me know later on . .
6 Let me know later how it works out . ’
7 If John , apart from the important reference in Chapter 3 , which we shall consider later , avoids the term Kingdom of God , he does on the other hand lay more stress than the other three Gospels on Jesus as King of Israel ( Barrett 1960:346 ) .
8 Other tribal cosmologies exhibit analogous features some of which we shall consider later .
9 At approximately the same time of the first circular data from HMI surveys , and HMI statements on the curriculum ( which we shall consider later ) , were being added to this evidence .
10 I shall consider later what was then said by Mr. Hurd about discretionary life sentences .
11 A new phase began , however , in the mid-1970s , which I shall consider later in the light of the current situation .
12 This is an extremely important result , both because of its policy implications which we shall consider later in this chapter and because of the scope it offers for testing the rational expectations hypothesis .
13 As we will discuss later , pathogens in general — including viruses — are now known to be of enormous ecological importance ( see p 132 ) .
14 Modern living things have , however , adapted to the presence of atmospheric nitrogen , oxygen , and carbon dioxide ; and each of these is pressed into service , in ways that we will discuss later .
15 As we shall discuss later , this is detectable through a screening technique known as amniocentesis , but this is only after the child has been conceived .
16 In general , as we shall discuss later , data should be collected because they are relevant — not just because they are interesting .
17 If the sociologist regards the interview schedule ( and , as we shall discuss later , the questionnaire ) in this way then he will not rush blithely into the field with a schedule which is the product of just a few hours ' odd jottings on rough paper .
18 In fact , as I shall discuss later , we can not get a simpler effect .
19 However , there are better and easier methods , which we will discuss later .
20 As we shall discuss later , David Norman , head of Russell Reynolds in 1980 , was responsible — helped by international teamwork — for finding Sir Ian McGregor for British Steel , the first time in Britain that headhunters had been called in to find a new boss for a nationalised industry .
21 I shall discuss later the theoretical objections to technological determinism ; Goody in any case recognises the dangers and in a later essay himself rejects such determinism , refuting the claims that this is what he was doing .
22 However , these have assimilated some of the developments in computer design which we will discuss later .
23 If by " meaning " is understood the objective content of linguistic utterances , or what might also be called their " objective thought-content " ( I shall discuss later the " historical " , performative aspects of such utterances ) , then , on the face of it at least , there seems to be nothing odd or improper in making identifying cross-references to meanings .
24 Habituation and sensitization are not the only kinds of non-associative learning : imprinting , which we discussed in an earlier section , is another kind ; and the development of bird song , which we shall discuss later , yet another .
25 Firstly , because there is immense variation in executive tasks and contexts — which we will pursue here ; secondly , because of the complexity of the potentially relevant external information resource — which we will pursue later .
26 As will appear later , it probably contributed more than Fleming 's own later observations on the mould Penicillium .
27 However , for reasons which will appear later , we have replaced the σ 3 -row with the implicit x 3 -row ( making the σ 3 -row implicit ) .
28 If multiprocessing desktop machines are on the agenda , and all indications are that they will appear later — that is to say next year — rather than sooner , then they will definitely use a higher performance Precision Architecture RISC 7100 part ( currently at 99MHz ) , which Hewlett-Packard will first introduce in a new uniprocessor system .
29 If multiprocessing desktops are on the agenda , and all indications are that they will appear later — ie next year — rather than sooner , then they 'll definitely use a higher performance PA RISC 7100 part ( currently at 99MHz ) that HP will first introduce in a new uniprocessor system .
30 Examples of the utility of this theorem will appear later .
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