Example sentences of "[prep] which we shall " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We do not seek a quick ‘ one-off ’ sale , after which we shall disappear from your life for ever .
2 I shall allow questions to continue until 4.30 , after which we shall have to move on to the debate .
3 Into the vacancy in men 's minds left by the retreat of the centennial myths of Christianity , crept strange cults and substitute faiths , some of which we shall look at in chapter ten .
4 Before we can proceed further we have to grasp a fundamental distinction which the Zande draw between two kinds of occult power , the first of which we shall call ‘ sorcery ’ and the second ‘ witchcraft ’ .
5 Other tribal cosmologies exhibit analogous features some of which we shall consider later .
6 This was most clearly shown by Paul Dirac 's formulation of the general principles of quantum theory , of which we shall give some account in the following chapter .
7 He first isolated pure lines of eight paired traits ; of which we shall confine ourselves to the lines of tall ’ and ‘ short ’ peas .
8 Saussure speaks of semiology ( 1974 : 16 ) as a ‘ science that studies the life of signs within society ’ , a science of which we shall hear more in the chapter on modern French structuralism .
9 It has always been noticed that information technology skills , of which we shall need more and more in the coming years , have tended to lag behind the demand for those skills .
10 There were , and still are of course , immense difficulties in the way of quantifying human phenomena , some of which we shall touch on later .
11 The instrument with which we shall purge our minds is the idea that I call the extended phenotype .
12 The argument from analogy with which we shall be concerned here admits that it is possible that the objects we call persons are , other than ourselves , mindless automata , but claims that we none the less have sufficient reason for supposing this not to be the case .
13 Firm I 's pessimism may be more readily justified if the competition between the firms is so intense that Firm II's choice of action is solely motivated by the desire to minimise the profits made by Firm I. This supposition is obviously too extreme to be realistic , but its relaxation involves further problems into which we shall not enter here .
14 How they are bound up is the philosophical problem of perception , into which we shall not enter .
15 We are moving towards a position in which we shall be able to examine the structure of discourse both in terms of surface relations of form , and underlying relations of functions and acts .
16 All extended proportional series can be broken down into a number of linear series of cells , as in figs. 5.6 and 5.7 , and this is the form in which we shall study them .
17 In which we shall be looking at , er another famous figure , but , but , er an even more remote and one , some people might say , mytho mythological one , namely Moses .
18 Next week we 're going to start a new twelve part series on opportunities in education , in which we shall be looking at various aspects of schools today .
19 This is the first of a short series of programmes in which we shall be taking a look at some of these unfortunate happenings , and asking questions such as , ‘ To what extent can they predicted ? ’ and ‘ How can they best be coped with ? ’
20 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 .
21 For instance , Dorothy Heathcote , in working on the Minamata tragedy towards performance , required the sixth form ‘ actors ’ to remain emotionally detached from their roles , an example of ‘ protection ’ from personal exposure to which we shall be returning later .
22 Once established they underwent a number of evolutionary ‘ bursts ’ in which diverse kinds of reptiles occupied a variety of habitats , the most spectacular of which was the dinosaur radiation in the Mesozoic , to which we shall return later .
23 They will remain fundamental to our concern , and a basic issue to which we shall return at the end .
24 Daraprim ( pyrimethamine ) , a very different substance , evolved some years later from research of more general significance , to which we shall return in the next chapter .
25 This is an important idea to which we shall return .
26 He wrote to all his senior departmental ministers asking , ‘ have you any problems to which we shall have to give our early attention ? ’
27 These depredations and the lack of a firm response by corrupt local magnates were to have a violent sequel to which we shall return .
28 When Curteys hit at Lewkenor 's and his associates ' involvement in corn speculation he acted in the tradition to which we shall return , of the magnate 's dispensing reasonable justice , but it was a politically fatal manoeuvre .
29 Apart from political intervention and law-giving , to which we shall return , a steadily more onerous pressure emerged in the form of military service .
30 Finally in this short resumé of the teachers ' predicament , we should mention the more personal factors to which we shall return later in the book : their aspirations , ambitions , values and concerns .
  Next page