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

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1 When we see those proposals we shall arrive at a judgment .
2 So , ’ he added sweetly , ‘ we shall stop at every tavern and ale house along the road .
3 They will remain fundamental to our concern , and a basic issue to which we shall return at the end .
4 This is an issue to which we shall return at the end of the chapter ; first , however , we must explore the broad classification of degree courses which has emerged from this analysis of their relationship with employment .
5 Thus the difference between prenominal attributive , ordinary predicative , and postnominal attributive adjectives is that they instantiate , respectively , the position of the P in the three intensional structures which , for the moment , we represent as follows : ( 37 ) Note that the structure in ( b ) is equivalent to a sentence , whereas that in ( c ) corresponds to a noun phrase ; this is an issue to which we shall return at the end of this chapter , where we shall propose a slight modification to these representations .
6 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 . ’
7 We shall look at a fragment of spoken discourse , not in terms of how we would characterise the participants ' shared information , but in terms of a process in which each participant expresses a personal topic within the general topic framework of the conversation as a whole .
8 We shall look at a few examples now in which simple geometries will be considered .
9 Next we shall look at a long solenoid filled with a high-permeability magnetic material as shown in Fig. 3.9 ( p. 73 ) .
10 We shall look at a particular example and shall conclude that , when it comes to complexity and beauty of design , Paley hardly even began to state the case .
11 First we shall look at the theories in their work concerning the evolution of kinship and marriage .
12 In the next section we shall look at the position of theists and of atheists when they do not rule out the possibility of dialogue with one another on grounds of unintelligibility , whether the unintelligibility be God-given or humanly made .
13 In this chapter we shall look at ways of smoothing the edges off the jagged initial appearance of data plotted over time ; we shall look at the observations three at a time , taking seriously the spirit of this somewhat sarcastic remark , to get indications of the trend .
14 Next time we shall look at the use of IT devices to monitor and control experiments .
15 We shall look at the reduction of limitations first .
16 We shall look at the differences between these theories in detail in Chapter 13 .
17 In this section we shall look at the formal devices used to mark the boundaries of chunks of both written and spoken discourse which form large units of some kind , such as paragraphs .
18 First , we shall look at the view of Dr L , ( at the time of interview , the head of department at B ) , who saw physics as a discipline essentially concerned with fundamental rules and laws :
19 We shall look at the executive role in policy implementation when we examine the workings of bureaucracy later .
20 There we shall look at the functions and services supplied by each and at the significant features of their balance sheets .
21 In section 4.2 we shall look at the economic significance of the group as a whole .
22 In this chapter and in Chapter 6 we shall look at the markets in which these institutions operate .
23 We shall look at the characteristics of bills more carefully in a moment .
24 We should note that a calculation using just the SEP gives exactly half this value ; we shall look at the complete calculation in Chapter 8 .
25 In this chapter , we shall look at the actual physical position of settlements , their sites in relation to the geography and topography of an area , and in relation to other settlements in the vicinity .
26 Second , we shall look at the types of interviews and the way in which they commonly feature in social research .
27 Here we shall look at the principles by which various methods of measuring velocity work ; the reader interested in the arrangements of a full working system and the procedures for operating it should follow up the references .
28 I am convinced that the prospect held out at Maastricht will not be the prospect that we shall have at the end of the 1990s .
29 The new ideas may also help with the formulation of a more precise definition of turbulence , as we shall discuss at the end of the next section .
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