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

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1 We shall examine in later chapters exactly what these foundations for a new church should be .
2 Modern utilitarians who are disinclined to appeal to intuition sometimes adopt an attitudinist view of ethical judgement , of the sort we shall examine in our third chapter .
3 Its most striking answer in International Relations has been systems theory , which we shall examine in the next chapter .
4 We shall examine in particular the extent to which recent changes in the NMGC represent survival strategies predicated primarily on the assumption that the organisation should continue and only secondarily on a clear conception of the service which it can should provide .
5 You should also note , in using hedging and qualifying expressions , that they will affect the overall tone or REGISTER of your essay ( as we shall examine in the next chapter ) .
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 The transnational view undeniably has a point , as do other recent views which we shall mention in a moment .
8 ‘ I can not guarantee we shall legislate in the next session since one never can — it is always understood that a final decision is taken nearer the Queen 's speech , ’ Mr Lang said
9 This we shall do in Section 3.7 .
10 For an ideal transformer we need to introduce a separate notation which we shall choose in the form shown in Fig. 4.10 .
11 ( It is a story which we shall tell in the following chapter . )
12 We shall assume in the discussion which follows that an ideal , well-formed proportional series is open .
13 On landing there he angrily refused to negotiate and demanded to be taken to Sweden and then the United States , warning in a note : ‘ We shall land in New York together , or die together . ’
14 As we shall show in the later sections , a great deal of the activities of the fans can be understood as symbolic activities in the mode of metonymy .
15 As we shall show in greater detail later , Descartes justified his principle of linear inertia by ostensibly deducing it from the immutability of God — a God who conserved the simplest kind of motion in the world .
16 As we shall show in Chapter 8 , the Labour Party entered office in 1974 with a radical programme but in severe economic conditions that restricted the freedom of manoeuvre enjoyed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and his cabinet colleagues .
17 So in return we shall specify in more detail what we expect from you .
18 This encourages a balanced view of Catholics , something which , as we shall emphasize in later chapters , can be absent amongst some policemen beleaguered behind their reinforced stations in areas of high tension and conflict .
19 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 .
20 They favoured unitary authorities for most of England though , as we shall explain in the next chapter , this recommendation was never implemented .
21 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 .
22 We shall speculate in our conclusions as to why that might be so .
23 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 .
24 To note a possibility to which we shall return in a moment , it is allowed that a possible world w " might be more like our actual world than a possible world w " even though the laws of our world are to some extent suspended or do not exist in w " and are intact in w " .
25 ( The interpersonal function is something extra to which we shall return in Chapter 8 .
26 It is this creative extendability of the linguistic code that we had in mind in the earlier discussion of deviation and foregrounding ( see 1.4. ) and to which we shall return in 4.6 ; but it is now time to recognize that these are relative , not absolute concepts .
27 This question of how much deindustrialization matters is an issue to which we shall return in Chapter 6 .
28 This is an issue to which we shall return in the final section of this chapter .
29 ‘ Then we shall return in force and compel the arrest . ’
30 I hope that we shall succeed in doing that , especially with regard to special inspections of previously undeclared sites .
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