Example sentences of "[noun sg] we [modal v] return to " in BNC.

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1 And with this proverb he rode on , saying , Friends , by God 's good pleasure we shall return to Castille with great honour and great gain .
2 It could well be argued that the committee under-played the ideological differences that exist between such approaches to the curriculum ( an issue we shall return to later ) .
3 Their advice should be available to party groups if that was where effective decisions were being taken : this is a point we shall return to later .
4 The first of these was the mechanism by which considerable weight was given by the Project Coordinating Team to the DCSL recommendations of schools for inclusion in the project ( a point we shall return to below ) .
5 Through the use of these negatives ( engineering and maths ) , we can see students ' construction of an identity as ‘ physicist ’ : a person who is not too remote from reality , but who is at the same time capable of independent and abstract thought — a point we shall return to in Chapter 6 .
6 For the present we must return to the adjudicative context within which natural justice and fairness operate .
7 Why this was the case we shall return to later ; for the moment our concern must be with the chronology , distribution and causes of the enclosures themselves .
8 Nevertheless it is pernicious because it trades on the pernicious habit of labelling things or qualities ( hard/soft , consonant/vowel ) masculine or feminine ( a habit we must return to in Chapter 5 ) .
9 Next month we will return to general computer hardware matters , with a look at some simple pieces of hardware to read bar codes .
10 Against this background we can return to the issues outlined at the head of the chapter .
11 Their choice of diamond was significant : it was one of the first scientific studies of crystals to exploit the simplicity of diamond : a property we will return to later .
12 My hon. Friends may fear that in some parts of the country we shall return to the oppressive and unfair bills which people received under the rates system .
13 If the hon. Member for Livingston ever got into power , no doubt we would return to the longer waits that we experienced under the Labour Government .
14 No doubt we will return to that .
15 But no doubt we can return to these matters if the honourable gentleman raises them further in the course of the debate .
16 Whether this is actually possible is a discussion we will return to in chapter 6 .
17 To round off this section we must return to Singer .
18 Thus , in the following , he can naturally be interpreted as referring to whoever it is that John refers to : ( 39 ) John came in and he lit a fire We will return to anaphora , but just note here that it is perfectly possible , as Lyons ( 1977a : 676 ) points out , for a deictic term to be used both anaphorically and deictically .
19 To explore this alternative dimension to politics we must return to Freud who , with LeBon , developed his distinctive theory of politics and the state .
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