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

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1 As in previous years we shall conduct a nationwide advertising campaign in the early autumn to encourage people to complete and return the electoral registration form .
2 We shall offer a set of ‘ observation kits ’ at different levels of detail which offer a practical way of collecting information on what happens in the classroom .
3 As a way of characterising the type of feature which will be required in a topic framework , we shall examine a fragment of conversational discourse and try to determine what is ‘ being talked about ’ .
4 In this version we shall in fact assume that it is wages that are set by trade unions one period in advance and that prices are flexible ; that is , we shall examine a sticky wage rather than a sticky price model .
5 In this chapter we shall examine a construction which has the basic value of providing a subordinate property to assist in identification of some entity when this is not fully achieved by the noun .
6 As the Prime Minister has promised the House a two-day debate in less than three weeks , I hope that we shall reach a sensible conclusion about all those substantial issues , and that the White Paper will be published before that debate , setting out the Government 's negotiating position at Maastricht .
7 BELVILLE : You are well read , I see , and we shall make a pretty story in romance , I warrant ye .
8 We shall perform a number of consequences-seeking calculations of this type in a more abstract setting from Chapter 3 onwards .
9 We shall create a new Greek academy …
10 So one day … we shall create a new Greek academy …
11 As a result of the Maastricht conferences and the debates that we shall have in the House we shall create a real , true Europe — a new Europe that is neither federal nor based upon free trade alone .
12 If we can take full advantage of the limited opportunities presented in a depressed market , we shall create a springboard for our future prosperity .
13 We shall assume a static magnetic field unc which will vary as unc when moved bodily by a velocity u .
14 Briefly , as we shall devote a section to each below , these categories are understood in the following way .
15 However , we shall treat a different eigenvalue : suppose we are told that there is an eigenvalue in the neighbourhood of
16 To explain this point ( which Barro ( 1977a ) recognizes in a footnote , p.107 fn. 15 ) and also to demonstrate that Barro 's results appear to hold true for countries other than the US , we shall outline a model similar to Barro 's which Attfield , Demery and Duck ( 1981a ) ( henceforth ADD ) applied to UK annual data for the period 1946–77 .
17 In order to see how speculative efficiency imposes restrictions of this sort we shall present a simplified version of the Baillie et al.
18 By the time we conclude our comparison of fabliau and exemplum at the end of this book we shall face a very similar formulation of the difference between the two as lying in the fabliau 's divergence from the normal modes of exemplum , which may in itself be funny , rather than in an all-preceding intention to be funny .
19 Below , we shall study a top down algorithm which presents its output in a form called a ’ decision tree ’ .
20 In the discussion which follows we shall draw a simplistic distinction between spoken and written language which takes highly literate written language as the norm of written language , and the speech of those who have not spent many years exposed to written language ( a set which will include most young undergraduate students ) as the norm for spoken language .
21 In advance of the seminar we shall send a copy of the interim report to all those attending .
22 It may be that one day we shall discover a complete unified theory that predicts them all , but it is also possible that some or all of them vary from universe to universe or within a single universe .
23 We shall put a big erm , jumper .
24 We shall characterise a lexeme as a family of lexical units .
25 As we explore the ramifications of their anatomy we shall encounter a good deal of the stupidity , the greed and self-interest , the plain conservatism — just human resistance to change of any kind — as well as the pure evil of human nature , working itself out in bricks and stone and mortar .
26 In this chapter , we shall consider a family of transformations of the scale of measurement which help make the variables easier to handle in data analysis .
27 The Big Bang Theory , which is anyway much simpler , explains phenomena rather than , conversely , requiring postulated phenomena in order to explain it , and therefore must be for the moment preferred — although elsewhere we shall consider a variant of the ‘ Little Bang ’ Theory
28 We shall consider a stretch of written discourse , not from a source such as a Paez ( Colombia ) folk tale or a specially constructed text , but from a recent English novel .
29 Next , we shall consider a more complicated problem where the space between the plates is filled by two different dielectrics , as shown in Fig. 2.17 .
30 In the present section we shall consider a cylindrical electron beam of radius a in which the charge density is uniform ( p = Po ) and all electrons travel with velocity v.
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