Example sentences of "[coord] i shall [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Drops of condensed water fell on to her head from the ceiling and she thought , I must leave soon or I shall melt into the atmosphere .
2 or I shall dwell in the house of the insane for ever .
3 You must leave immediately , or I shall write to Madame Cannabich .
4 I shall be discussing the general principles of this kind of analysis , and I shall start with some remarks about the general context within which the Belfast research ( 1975–82 ) was designed — the context of historical linguistic description .
5 Thorfinn said , ‘ The land I have described is my land , and I shall place on it whom I please . ’
6 We shall try to do more about car crime during 1992 , and I shall reflect on my hon. Friend 's comments to see whether we can accommodate his request .
7 I find that the weather and seasonal changes play a large part in my ideas about landscape and I shall persist in stalking the same places throughout the seasons and years .
8 He has sought to make a political attack on me , and I shall reply in the same way because the right hon. Gentleman has been highly selective in his summary of the case .
9 Lewis spent nearly two weeks in a rehabilitation clinic in Oxford , and Jenkins added : ‘ We shall look at a full report from the centre , and I shall speak to the Llanelli club doctor . ’
10 And I shall feel as if I 've got up , been round the world
11 But the distinction between literary texts and cultural texts is important , and I shall return to it .
12 Gandhi recognizes the dangers of making a fetish of ahi sā and I shall return to these questions .
13 What they actually have in common beyond not being ‘ them ’ is not so clear , especially today , and I shall return to this point .
14 When the Line was adduced , the science of plate tectonics was unknown ; the mechanics are better understood today , and I shall return to them later .
15 As a whole , in spite of the splendour of much of the singing , this ca n't quite replace present recommendations , particularly those in the historic field , but I am sure it thrilled the audience in the Suntory Hall a year ago and I shall return to it from time to time for its visceral force and its sense of a tension well sustained .
16 One possibility is that some superior form of modifiability occurred in the smell-brain , and I shall return to this later .
17 The question of why there seem to be so many more particles than antiparticles around us is extremely important , and I shall return to it later in the chapter .
18 How far present-day societies are likely to proceed along this road is a matter of debate ( and I shall return to the question in Chapter 6 ) , but at the least it has to be recognized that in recent years the idea of political action has been very substantially broadened , so that there is already a quite widespread awareness of the variety of ways in which individuals and groups of individuals can assert their dissent from the policies of government at all levels ( for example , the revolt against the poll tax in Britain ) and bring into the arena of public debate alternative policies .
19 But the resurgence of nationalism in Europe and in other parts of the world , in diverse forms , has made this once again a major issue for political analysis , and I shall return to various aspects of it in the next chapter .
20 My hon. Friend gave the details and I shall return to them in a moment .
21 I thought that rather an inelegant phrase and I shall return to it .
22 But it is of great interest , because it demonstrates a familiar mode of argumentation that has been more widely used in historical descriptions and that can be found in many places , and I shall comment on a similar case in ME below .
23 ‘ She has the ears of a cat , too , and I shall suffer for it . ’
24 And I shall go with you .
25 One day , quite soon , I shall ride back into your Palace , and I shall reign in your place . ’
26 And I shall quote to you from er a message of Lincoln 's to congress in eighteen sixty one and from some of his er private correspondence .
27 Er , we need to also think about erm , er , B types , because B types may not be being assertive , and I shall talk about assertive behaviour in a few moments .
28 I support the aims of the Bill , and I shall vote for it tonight .
29 I shall nevertheless vote against the motion and I shall vote for the amendment although as much as I wished it had happened or , or erm a different proposal to Mr because I do n't think it helps your argument when you call your opponents instead of arguing face and er unlike Mr I actually do believe its in subsidiarity and I think we should accept Leicester and Leicester only and what the Leicester hunt will do should be decided here in Leicester , not in Westminster , er any more than the composition of our offices should be , should be decided in Brussels and I believe in subsidiarity .
30 Unless my right hon. and hon. Friends on the Treasury Bench can produce a new formula to deal with this problem , I shall have to support the new clauses and I shall vote against the Government .
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