Example sentences of "i shall [verb] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I know that my hon. Friend the Member for Wiltshire , North is concerned to improve hotel accommodation throughout the Province , so I shall draw the hon. Gentleman 's remarks to his attention .
2 I shall draw the hon. Gentleman 's point to the attention of my hon. Friends who will serve on the Standing Committee on the Bill .
3 I am not sure whether a statement on yesterday 's meeting would be appropriate , but I shall draw the hon. Gentleman 's request to my right hon. Friend 's attention .
4 We have much important business to conduct , so I doubt whether a statement will be possible , but I shall draw the hon. Gentleman 's remarks to the attention of my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Scotland .
5 And then I shall inform the Public Prosecutor 's department that I 've informed both of you .
6 After looking at first reactions I shall sketch the main lines of theological comment and response , and then liturgical , practical and ecumenical developments ; then some ‘ growing points ’ and problems in areas both of praxis and of theological reflection .
7 I am still waiting for to give me one or two ideas for his 18th birthday present — though I shall make the final decision ! !
8 I have sent for Stirling to report here on his return when I shall make the new procedures clear to him .
9 At the end of the chapter I shall make the paradoxical point that the theory we are looking for may actually need to seem improbable , even miraculous , to our subjective judgement ( because of the way our subjective judgement has been made ) .
10 I shall answer the hon. Gentleman 's question about Trident in a couple of minutes .
11 I shall check the exact figure with the SDA and , if I am in a position to reveal it , I shall do so .
12 I shall go the extra mile
13 I shall bring the cardboard box with everything in it , and you shall sort out exactly what you need . ’
14 I shall present the following notions in turn :
15 I shall tell the hon. Gentleman a little more about the two individuals , if I may , in a brief intervention .
16 There is evidence that the decline in manufacturing has been arrested , and I shall give the hon. Gentleman that evidence .
17 I shall give the hon. Member for Blackburn ( Mr. Straw ) time to read the newspaper cutting that he was trying to wave at us to make his great point .
18 I shall give the hon. Member the same reply that I gave previously : this is a matter for the Leader of the House , who is in the Chamber .
19 Very well : I shall trade the hon. Gentleman a point of order for a speech .
20 I shall miss the wonderful pâtisserie shops shining like brightly coloured jewels in every French high street .
21 I shall miss the Northern League , ’ he says .
22 The few percent of solar energy that filters down is just one of these sources — I shall discuss the other sources in section 9.3.3 .
23 I shall summarize the general idea by telling a particular story about beavers .
24 I shall take the odd break from coffee mornings to engage in militant breastfeeding in some prominent spot in a major department store .
25 If so , I shall get the exact number of yards . ’
26 I shall remember the Holy Scripture and wait for God 's will .
27 Because of the difficulty of finding precise equivalents in English , I shall follow the common practice of sticking to the original Russian terms .
28 If , at the end of several hours ' watching , I can walk into the Guitarist studio and sit behind the desk with any confidence at all , then I shall declare the whole operation a complete success .
29 Initially ( Chapter 2 ) , I shall trace the progressive development of Nizan 's life and work between 1905 and 1939 by focusing on the three formative structural influences that shaped his existence : the family unit , the schooling system and the communist party .
30 For instance Balibar ( 1970 , p. 214 ) writes that the ‘ double function ’ of the capitalist ( at once exploiter of labour power and organiser of production ) ‘ is an index of what I shall call the double nature of the division of labour in production ( the ‘ technical ’ division of labour and the ‘ social ’ division of labour ) . ’
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