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

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1 However , it is as nothing compared with the difficulties that we shall face if the generals , who have effectively staged a coup against civil authority , are allowed ultimate success .
2 Our position is that we shall ensure that we have a nuclear deterrent that is available at all times for the protection of our country .
3 So we shall know if anybody steals some . ’
4 ‘ For example , some local residents have expressed interest in acquiring small plots of nearby land and we shall ensure that other residents have the same opportunity . ’
5 It has come down and we shall ensure that it stays down .
6 The Government have introduced the Bill at the earliest possible moment in the Session , and we shall ensure that secondary legislation is made as quickly as possible .
7 In ( 19 ) and ( 20 ) we have the less common case of a property extended by an entity , E P ; we continue to assume that a qualified property remains a property : Where we are considering some actual form of words with a view to describing their categorizations and relationships , and especially where the phrases are somewhat more complex , it may be appropriate to partly invert the notation , and to omit the separate representation of the word-meaning , as in ( 21 ) which so depicts the intensional structure of ( 18 ) and ( 19 ) : Qualification is clearly an ordered relation and we shall assume that it is a binary relation ; one of the two elements related is the principal element ( on co-ordination , see Section 1.9 and Chapter 8 ) .
8 The democratic path is the one that we shall tread , and we shall go where it leads , not where terrorists seek to direct .
9 I hear what my hon. Friend says and we shall see whether more opportunities can be given to the RNR to train with the regular Navy .
10 This is a Labour amendment it is up to them now to implement it implement it within existing budgets is what it says and we shall see whether they take their responsibilities as seriously as they should .
11 Indeed , his treatment of this first book ( and we shall see that it is not very dissimilar from the others ) is a blatant piece of eisogesis — reading into ( as opposed to exegesis , out of ) the text what he wishes to see , or rather plant .
12 the credit assignment problem and we shall see that the classification scheme set out in Chapter 1 does not always work perfectly .
13 The gravitational constant G determines the strength of the coupling of these waves to space–time ; its value is small and we shall see that this implies that space–time is very stiff .
14 The European Central Bank is absolutely necessary and we shall concede that it has to be politically autonomous to reassure the Germans ’ .
15 We are all growing old and we shall die and be buried . ’
16 As we go to press , FRS 3 has still not been issued , but we shall assume that it follows the lines of FRED 1 .
17 ( There is also of course a third , distinct , possibility , that it is a daily record kept in Italian , but we shall assume that this uses Italian in the sense of Italian language — that is to say , as a noun — and is , therefore , an example of a different kind of syntactic phrase , the noun + noun combination , seen in fish tank . )
18 Let us now consider ( 39 ) where the word plastered follows its noun ( again , an attributive interpretation is possible in principle — Clara might be an offensively wealthy tourist who travels round Italy trying to buy buildings and parts of buildings to take home as souvenirs ; but we shall assume that this meaning can safely be left out of account ) : ( 39 ) Clara wants the façade plastered It at once becomes apparent that this may specify either an event , with the façade on the receiving end of it , or a state which Clara wishes to see existing in the façade .
19 P1 is not a LP , but we shall see that it can be transformed into one by observing that criterion ( 10.1 ) can be rewritten as and , if we define deviation variables d 1 , e 1 , > 0 to satisfy then , provided at least one of d 1 and e 1 is zero , ( 10.2 ) is equal
20 But we shall see that the behaviour of financial institutions is often dominant .
21 But we shall see as well that the Conservative belief , for both retributive and deterrent purposes , in punishment by incarceration , has at least had to acknowledge economic realities .
22 There are no simple explanations for complicated events like general elections , but we shall take as our starting point V. O. Key 's learned view that elections are determined largely by retrospective considerations .
23 These substitutes also pay interest or have some other form of income attraction while we shall assume that money does not .
24 One day it will be like this for us in heaven when we shall see that some of the things we clung to on earth were only childish attachments .
25 We are already enjoying eternal life , and physical death will merely mean the passing from life , in which we see through a glass darkly , to life when we shall see and know as we are known .
26 It is the projected activities , the group under E and F , which will concern us in this section , as we shall see that it is projection which protects the participants .
27 For we shall live and we shall die ,
28 Then if we are taxed with what we said about someone , we shall be calm for we shall know that everything we said was benevolent .
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