Example sentences of "[noun] we shall [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 It was worked out by the Austrian ethologist Karl von Frisch in the middle of this century , by methods we shall discuss in the next section .
2 If this initial survey proves useful and gets good feedback we shall continue and do a series on all our local rivers .
3 I do not believe for a moment that in the future we shall allow millions of our fellow-countrymen , through no fault of their own , to pass through life ill-housed , ill-clothed , ill-fed , ill-educated .
4 A certain amount of cross-border examination to ensure that European Community rules are met already exists and , as my hon. Friend knows from what I said earlier , in future we shall have much tighter enforcement rules to ensure that those countries — all of them — that sign up to European directives will have to obey those directives or face fines for not doing so .
5 We also need to reduce our borrowings so that in the future we shall have the financial flexibility to make further acquisitions or fund major capital projects .
6 In the extract from The Prelude we shall see how ‘ spots of time ’ , especially those connected with ‘ power ’ of feeling ( line 21 ) , are the source of ‘ future restoration ’ .
7 The rule we shall consider is
8 During the 1993/94 programme we shall continue the series of afternoon events which have proved extremely popular .
9 Bearing this in mind we shall endeavour to answer the question ‘ Should you go to Yoga ? ’
10 ( Where it is necessary to distinguish explicitly between meanings and forms of words we shall follow the convention of Lyons and others in using small capital letters for the former . )
11 In this chapter we shall identify two periods of decisive constitutional change since the eighteenth century , and in Chapter 4 we will deal with the substantial pressures for change with respect to the contemporary constitution .
12 In the final chapter we shall return to consider those questions .
13 In the first section of this chapter we shall study some indicators of present inter-regional economic differences in Yugoslavia .
14 In this chapter we shall analyse the decisions made in each area by the four speech processing systems , HARPY , HWIM , HEARSAY-II , and TRACE .
15 In this chapter we shall go deeper into the question of how limited that job is , and shall look at the results of some current formula-based work .
16 In this chapter we shall outline the present position in each country and consider the response to the reorganisation of the early 1970s. first , however , we need to consider further the principles which informed the debates about local government structure .
17 Unfortunately such a solution is rarely available and in this and the next chapter we shall examine ways of ‘ solving ’ such problems , which are typically grouped together under the title multiple-objective or multiple-criterion problems .
18 That they were also all subject to periods of psychotic breakdown makes them of additional interest and in the next chapter we shall examine precisely what that means and how it might help us to understand their particular form of creativity .
19 In this chapter we shall examine only some of the more important types of stratification structure .
20 In this chapter we shall examine the various factors which may influence the entrepreneur when deciding on the form the business will take , and consider the legal framework within which the business will operate .
21 In this and the following chapter we shall examine their basic workings as institutions in their own right , and in chapter 16 we shall examine their interaction .
22 In this chapter we shall examine two influential tests of rational expectations models in macroeconomics .
23 In this chapter we shall examine a construction which has the basic value of providing a subordinate property to assist in identification of some entity when this is not fully achieved by the noun .
24 In the rest of this chapter we shall drop the assumption that prices are fully flexible and examine the implications of assuming that they are either fixed or at least move only slowly to their equilibrium values .
25 In the remainder of this chapter we shall apply the categories in 3.1 selectively to three texts which are comparable both in length and in that each of them is the opening passage of a short story .
26 In this chapter we shall explore how drama can be used alongside other subjects ; how it can be used to create and enhance learning opportunities , to stimulate research , and to give cross-curricular coherence .
27 In this chapter we shall discuss certain characteristics and properties of matrices which are of particular importance in dynamical studies of systems with multiple degrees of freedom .
28 In this chapter we shall discuss some numerical methods for solving problems formulated in terms of matrices .
29 In this chapter we shall discuss these and other aspects of contextual description which are required in the analysis of discourse .
30 Animals apparently avoid unrestrained battles , and in this chapter we shall discuss three kinds of social behaviour that reduce the amount of aggressive fighting .
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