Example sentences of "we shall [verb] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ( It is a story which we shall tell in the following chapter . )
2 We shall rely on the good old English fist , ’ he said reassuringly .
3 We shall rely on the vector-potential formulation because that appears to be best suited for utilizing the axial symmetry of the chosen geometry .
4 Medical science was not yet equipped for investigation into near-death experiences , to which we shall refer in the final chapter ; almost the only form of resuscitation with which doctors were familiar was that following near-fatal immersion in water , accompanied , as it often is , by a rapid replay of the victim 's life .
5 We shall return to the unemployment-income curve in Chapter 7 where it will be used in our discussion of anti-unemployment and anti-inflation policies .
6 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 .
7 This is an issue to which we shall return in the final section of this chapter .
8 The rise of unemployment up to 1986 raises many questions about the distribution of income in society , which we shall consider in the final part of this chapter .
9 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 .
10 In section 4.2 we shall look at the economic significance of the group as a whole .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 Young fans , particularly those wearing what we shall describe as the standard ‘ Aggro Outfit ’ , are directed by the police and officials into the appropriate secure area of the ground as they enter .
14 Chairman Peter Hawes , 33 , says : ‘ We shall fight for the basic rights of our elders . ’
15 Then in 3 to 6 we shall deal with the other possible answer : the way that coherence is created by factors outside language .
16 In this chapter we shall deal with the major advice-giving agencies prior to a discussion of the arrangements under which the private profession and the law centres provide legal advice and assistance .
17 Here we shall deal with the basic carve gybe on a board over 3.00m .
18 For the moment , however , we shall turn to the recent attempts to bring together our understanding of the other forces of nature into a single , unified quantum theory .
19 It is to the detail of these developments that we shall turn in the following chapters .
20 In Moscow tomorrow we shall discuss with the Russian authorities the way forward on a number of difficult economic questions .
21 Does the future lie with ‘ demythologised ’ , ‘ secular ’ or revamped Liberal theology of the kinds we shall discuss in the following chapters ?
22 We shall assume that the syntactic positions for adjectives in English are as below ; we give first the intensional pattern of which each is the surface exponent , as well as an example for each , and also an instance which is ungrammatical and where we shall later be able to suggest reasons for the ungrammaticality ; in each case we shall underline in the intensional pattern the property which is instantiated by the adjective , merely for clarification and not as an integral part of the notation : [ P E ] prenominal attributive position surface syntactic sequence : adjective + noun as in hungry passengers ; but note that *asleep kittens is ungrammatical { [ E ] ( P ) } ordinary predicative position surface syntactic sequence : noun phrase + be + adjective as in the critics were upset ; but note that her husband was mere is ungrammatical [ E P ] postnominal attributive position surface syntactic sequence : noun phrase + adjective as in the crimes alleged ; but note that the road wide is ungrammatical ( ( P E ) P ) predicate qualifying position surface syntactic sequence : verb phrase + noun phrase + adjective as in he brought his gun loaded ; but note that she uses her mixer lightweight is ungrammatical [ E ( P P ) ] postverbal position surface syntactic sequence : verb phrase + adjective as in the crowd remained angry ; but note that his brother resisted obstinate is ungrammatical ( ( P P ) E ) adverbal position surface syntactic sequence ( usually ) : verb + noun phrase + adjective as in Ali rubbed the lamp clean ; but note that Mark resembles the officer sinister is ungrammatical ( P { E P } ) clausal position = surface syntactic sequence : verb + noun phrase ( + be ) + adjective as in he considers the prosecution case hopeless but note that Sue reported the prizes aplenty is ungrammatical { E P } P extraclausal position surface syntactic sequence ( usually ) : adjective + clause as in furious , the king ordered many arrests but note that furious , the king had three wives is ungrammatical As we have said , these are the adjectival positions of English ( and possibly of any natural human language ) .
23 The numbers of staff that we shall employ in the new office will be those needed to discharge the duties set out in clause 2 .
24 We shall fly over the German lines , looking for trouble .
25 Accordingly , we shall begin with the Copernican innovation as a test case .
26 In this section , where we are concerned with the development of discourse skills in students and the degree to which existing materials help this development , we shall proceed in the opposite direction from that of Section One and move top-down through the levels of discourse described in Figure 8 .
27 As we shall see in the following chapter , mechanization has not been the only process responsible for this , but by enabling the farmer to de-bureaucratize his farm and place greater emphasis on developing the personal loyalty of his workforce rather than relying upon regulations and sanctions , it has been an important contributory factor .
28 Nowadays these horizons have expanded to take in much of the world outside by virtue of changes in education , in transport and communications , and , as we shall see in the following chapter , by virtue also of changes in the social composition of village community itself .
29 As we shall see in the following chapter , this does not necessarily mean that the interests of farmers and landowners are no longer dominant in rural society , but it does mean that this dominance has increasingly to be carried out by reaching an accommodation with these new conditions .
30 Alongside the need to engage in a more explicit discussion of the values which underlie rural planning ( which , as we shall see in the following section , is rarely a purely technocratic exercise ) there is the need to ensure that the relevant knowledge about today 's countryside is more widely disseminated .
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