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

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1 There could be no doubt that EPR , as we shall acronymically refer to them , had drawn attention to a very striking feature of quantum mechanics .
2 Since , as has been argued here , international forces are a factor in all the structural changes in the UK economy , we shall also focus on the international side of the economy in the years leading up to the 1970s/1980s crossroads .
3 We shall also look at certain features of the learning environment of the departments which are of particular interest .
4 We shall also look at the Cinderellas of settlement studies — hamlets and farmsteads , which have received little attention but are of immense importance because they are widespread and because they are clearly related to both the origins and the decline of villages .
5 We shall also report to the financial advisers in accordance with the terms of the engagement as set out below .
6 Well I think I 'll go round actually cos they 're queuing up , we want to go to the grocers so er if we go up The Avenue we shall just come past the front of it .
7 We shall rather return to a very simple geometrical configuration for deriving Ohm 's law .
8 ‘ And now , for once , we shall both drink to that . ’
9 He is on fire , and I believe we shall both drown in the heat , and I believe neither of us would care if we did …
10 Andrew Greeley encapsulates it well in his phrase ‘ the sacrementality of human sexuality , ’ to which is allied a concept we shall repeatedly discover in Leonard , of women as the ‘ sacraments par excellence of God 's attractive love , ’ to use another of Greeley 's telling insights .
11 This holistic , comprehensive , catholic approach ( whose history we shall briefly review in the next chapter ) is usually called ‘ functionalism ’ or ‘ structural functionalism ’ .
12 From a wealth of historical material we shall briefly look at examples illustrating three working models .
13 In this chapter we shall briefly look at formal organisation structure and consider a variety of views of how this structure might be established so as to optimise the efficiency of the organisation .
14 The electorate must realise that , if Labour is successful at the next general election — which is highly unlikely — we shall immediately return to the old rating system .
15 We shall simply look for some other explanation .
16 By the thirteenth century such material makes a substantial penetration of vernacular literature , with important examples in texts which we shall later meet in connection with Chaucer 's fabliaux in The Romance of the Rose ( 8455ff. ) and Eustache Deschamps ' Miroir de Mariage , " Mirror of Marriage " .
17 " We shall yet talk of this day in ladies ' chambers , " said the Count of Soissons at the Battle of al-Mansurah .
18 The South Saxons whose numbers we shall never know with any accuracy , built up a complex Wealden farming system , backed by a communication network that can only have been an extension of the lesser economic roads of the Romano-Britons .
19 It is remarkable indeed how little understanding we have of warfare in this period ; and we shall never know in detail how medieval kings acquired and held their power unless we can find out more precisely how they recruited their armies and led them .
20 We believe that at least partial answers to these questions will emerge later in this book — we shall certainly return to them — but a few brief comments are worth setting down before closing the present chapter .
21 We shall certainly keep in close touch with the Cornish ambulance service and , of course , with every other ambulance service to ensure that they match response times and put to good use our investment in the ambulance service .
22 Turning over the free endpaper to the next double page , we shall usually arrive at the first appearance of print , unless the publisher has been very free with his endpapers and given us some blanks .
23 We shall only succeed in dealing with the problems through a vast international cooperative effort .
24 Given the enormous importance of the English NAB to the future shape of public sector higher education , we shall now examine in detail the problems which it faces and the circumstances in which it is likely to operate .
25 Having quoted the opening of Gormenghast in 1.4 as an example of an opaque style , we shall now return to another passage which occurs shortly after it in the same novel .
26 Nevertheless , the four categories enable us to identify common features of some of the different types of documents which we shall now consider in detail .
27 Having dealt at length with the management and , to a limited extent , with the financing of public sector higher education , we shall now consider in more detail the ‘ pooling ’ arrangements that have obtained in recent years and the likely criteria upon which NAB 's financial decisions will be based .
28 But it is by no means difficult if one has a procedure for social research and this procedure we shall now consider by working from an empirical approach to enquiry .
29 Bearing Philo 's words in mind — in particular his characterization of the male as active/causal and the female as passive — we shall now turn to the main focus of this essay , that is , an examination of the rituals of circumcision and menstrual taboo .
30 Having dealt at length with the management and funding of the institutions providing higher education in the public sector , we shall now turn to an examination of the validation arrangements which appertain to their courses .
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