Example sentences of "shall see in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This early emphasis on the ‘ scientific ’ analysis of social life was to have ( and still has ) considerable implications for the subsequent development of the discipline , as we shall see in Chapters 12 and 13 .
2 Yet as we shall see in chapters 4 and 5 , there has been considerable theoretical work ( e. g. by Finsinger and Vogelsang , 1981 ) on socially efficient bonus structures , relating pay to social surplus created .
3 ( We shall see in Chapters 2 , 4 and 9 that they may well have good grounds for this belief . )
4 As we shall see in chapters 6 and 7 , they present problems also ; but these problems tend to be more generally acknowledged , and to be on the whole less intractable than the ones we are discussing here .
5 A reduction in the number of steps implies less excitation changes and , as we shall see in Chapters 5 and 6 , it is the speed with which excitation changes can take place which ultimately limits the time taken to move the required distance .
6 We shall see in Sections 19.6 , 20.3 , and 21.3 that this concept is extended to associate a variety of length scales with the turbulence .
7 Knowledge and understanding of them can thus be helpful in our efforts to understand what is happening when flows become turbulent ( although as we shall see in Sections 24.6 and 24.7 , the extent to which the new ideas ‘ solve the problem of turbulence ’ can be — and has been — overstated . )
8 As we shall see in section 3.2 , this is a more difficuIt exercise than it would appear .
9 Further evidence for a hot Jovian interior is provided by the satellites , as you shall see in section 9.4.4 .
10 ( We shall see in section 4.3.3 that the non-interest-bearing nature of money is critically important . )
11 This has immense significance for the authorities ' ability to control the money supply , as we shall see in section 9.1 .
12 As we shall see in section 5.2 , this is only one of several curious features we come across when we try to think of the discount market in conventional terms .
13 We shall see in Section 5.7 how arguments based on symmetry may be helpful in deciding which vibrations will interact with IR radiation , and which will not .
14 We shall see in Section 5.7 that symmetry considerations allow us to decide which vibrational modes will lead to Raman scattering .
15 We shall see in Section 5.16.3 that such studies can be important even for stable substances , and can allow spectroscopic identification of species such as free radicals and other reactive fragments that are normally short-lived .
16 Effects of phase on spectra We shall see in Section 5.8.3 that changes in rotational quantum numbers accompany the vibrational transitions for gases .
17 We shall see in Section 5.14 how such frequency shifts may be used to provide precise information about the way in which the local modes contribute to the normal modes of vibration .
18 As we shall see in Section 2.8 , it is important to keep employees fully informed of the project .
19 As we shall see in Section 3.8 , there are a few instances when even TNF needs further simplification , and Kent ( 1983 ) and Date ( 1990 ) describe these extensions .
20 As we shall see in Section 6.5 , some weathering products show a remarkable resilience to changing environmental conditions to the extent that in some circumstances they can persist in the landscape essentially unaltered for tens of millions of years .
21 We shall see in Section 21.5 that some qualification of this concept is needed for the motion in the vicinity of a solid boundary .
22 We shall see in Section 21.5 that additional ideas are needed for flows adjacent to walls .
23 There are also some other fluid dynamical applications of these ideas , as we shall see in Section 24.5 .
24 Sometimes , however , they are only part of the full picture , as we shall see in examples below .
25 There are countless examples from most African countries of a similar negligence of completed investments , although some of this is a by-product of the nature of development aid , as we shall see in Chapter 11 .
26 If men were beginning to abandon their fear of hell , they were clinging with some tenacity to their hopes of heaven , as we shall see in chapter nine .
27 As we shall see in Chapter 6 the closing decades of the century and the early years of the new century were more concerned with the ‘ collective ’ approach than the individual , and younger ministers were only mirroring this change .
28 Political involvement at the national level was , as we shall see in Chapter 9 , fraught with dangers .
29 As we shall see in Chapter 5 , the defence in fact proved conclusive in the GCHQ case itself .
30 Although young children ( say , from eighteen months to six years ) can be quarrelsome ( as we shall see in chapter 8 ) , pro-social actions may be seen in some 10–20 per cent of all social contacts .
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