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

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1 But if voters have voted for a successful candidate why should some of them — just which , we shall examine later — be given the opportunity to vote for another candidate ?
2 More recent theories , which we shall examine later , suggest that the idea of individuals being led is too passive and that the capacity for leadership may be in all of us .
3 Lucas has advanced certain ingenious theoretical devices to explain the phenomenon of persistence which we shall examine later in this chapter .
4 As we shall show later , what people mean by their actions depends on what expectations they have about the actions of others .
5 Exactly how a rational person will solve it we shall show later on .
6 These social divisions have other effects , as we shall emphasize later , but they have very little influence on the duties which comprise routine police work , so that routine policing is largely unaffected by religion .
7 In fact , the statistical significance test controversy was the precursor of concerns that turned out to be rather more fundamental to variable analysis ; concerns that were not voiced by such as Becker and other Symbolic Interactionists who wanted no truck with a sociology derived from variable analysis ( and whose criticisms we shall review later in this chapter ) , but by advocates of variable analytic and survey approaches .
8 It was conceded by counsel for the defendant , necessarily and rightly , that the old offence of larceny by a trick is covered by section 1(1) of the Act of 1968 , as well as by section 15(1) to which we shall refer later , despite what may be called the apparent consent of the victim .
9 Once established they underwent a number of evolutionary ‘ bursts ’ in which diverse kinds of reptiles occupied a variety of habitats , the most spectacular of which was the dinosaur radiation in the Mesozoic , to which we shall return later .
10 Finally in this short resumé of the teachers ' predicament , we should mention the more personal factors to which we shall return later in the book : their aspirations , ambitions , values and concerns .
11 We shall return later to the problem of discovering who bewitches whom .
12 In addition there is the complex constitutional position of the constable to which we shall return later .
13 We shall return later to the benefits of exercise , but first , let's examine our eating habits .
14 We shall return later in this chapter to the doctrine of precedent .
15 This raises further issues about what is meant by the ‘ importance of manufacturing ’ , and how it should be measured , to which we shall return later .
16 The net effect of these injunctions ( as well as others we shall meet later ) is to ensure that the natural inability of human beings to respond ‘ perfectly ’ to all situations , however demanding or paradoxical , is construed by those human beings as clear evidence of personal inadequacy : they lack the ability , resilience or ready-made savoir-faire that they somehow ought to have , in limitless supply , if they are to be able to look themselves in the eye in the bathroom mirror each morning .
17 Various religious were in Rome for other reasons , such as Thomas of Marlborough , whom we shall meet later , and Richard , prior of Dunstable , a smallish and not very significant Augustinian house .
18 As we shall suggest later , the relationships in which the inhabitants are enmeshed often encourage soil degradation and erosion in fragile environments — which has the effect of a vicious circle and makes it even harder for transitional and progressive technical ( and political ) changes to be made .
19 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 ) .
20 Other tribal cosmologies exhibit analogous features some of which we shall consider later .
21 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 .
22 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 .
23 We shall look later in some detail at how independence changed the media of Tanzania and Zambia , but first it will be helpful to consider what facilities existed throughout Africa in that period of transition .
24 Support of Amorges and its ultimate consequence , the defeat of Athens in the Peloponnesian War , is however a story we shall resume later .
25 We shall argue later in the book that the information processing capability of new technology may undermine many of the reasons why large firms came into being .
26 As we shall argue later , such generalised and monolithic views of the legal system are inadequate descriptions of reality , particularly when advanced as the basis of political action .
27 We shall argue later that the same is true for our preferred approach based on human rights .
28 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 .
29 In general , as we shall discuss later , data should be collected because they are relevant — not just because they are interesting .
30 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 .
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