Example sentences of "we shall assume " in BNC.
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1 | We shall assume that you have come to work but not to do it all the time . |
2 | For purposes of exposition we shall assume that the surplus-value is divided equally between accumulation and unproductive consumption . |
3 | In what follows , we shall assume that the aggregate demand for labour is inversely related to the real wage and directly related to the rate of national income . |
4 | In developing our simple model , we shall assume that the demand for labour ( D L ) , which we shall define here as the number of jobs being offered by all firms in the economy , depends directly on the rate of national income ( Y ) and inversely on real labour costs ( RLC ) . |
5 | For the purposes of our policy discussion in Chapter 7 , we shall assume that the long-run inflation-unemployment curve also has a negative slope , but is steeper than the short-run curve . |
6 | As we go to press , FRS 3 has still not been issued , but we shall assume that it follows the lines of FRED 1 . |
7 | And since we are familiar with Poulantzas ' rejection of voluntarism , we shall assume that this in turn is to be explained in a way that avoids treating either individuals or classes as subjects . |
8 | Given that most academics — and , we shall assume students — have a strong sense of subject loyalty , we have now to ask : what are the qualities that attract students to their subjects ? |
9 | First of all , we must delimit the form of a lexical item syntagmatically ; that is to say , we must be able to state in any sentence where the boundaries between lexical items are ( we shall assume that any well-formed sentence consists of a whole number of such units ) . |
10 | We shall assume in the discussion which follows that an ideal , well-formed proportional series is open . |
11 | We shall assume ( Fig. 2.6 ) that the vectors drawn from any point charge to point P are all parallel to the vector r0 drawn from an arbitrarily chosen origin inside ( just another way of saying that the point P is far away ) . |
12 | First we shall assume that the current density is confined to a thin wire in which case the integration variable may be changed |
13 | We shall assume that the two kinds of particles have equal densities and move in opposite directions . |
14 | We shall assume that a ring of radius a situated in the z = 0 plane carries a current I ( Fig. 3.6 ) and we wish to determine the magnetic field at the point |
15 | We shall assume that , before we switch on the current , H = 0 and B = 0 , a natural-enough assumption . |
16 | Now we shall assume that there is a linear relationship between the vector potential and the current density |
17 | We shall assume a static magnetic field unc which will vary as unc when moved bodily by a velocity u . |
18 | In this section , we shall assume that any task is described by assertions formed with predicates . |
19 | He has been convicted of crime , and we shall assume for the moment that he has not behaved himself within the meaning of these words . |
20 | These substitutes also pay interest or have some other form of income attraction while we shall assume that money does not . |
21 | To derive an aggregate supply curve we shall assume that suppliers are primarily influenced by the relative price of the good on their island . |
22 | The answer is because of the relative demand shifts between islands which , we shall assume , are a significant feature of the economy . |
23 | We shall assume that this deviation is a random variable , , with mean of zero and constant variance , . |
24 | To keep things as simple as possible we shall assume that the quantity of money is determined by the government in accordance with the following process : where g is a constant and v t is a random , serially uncorrelated error with zero mean and constant variance . |
25 | We shall assume that g is known and we shall treat g as the predictable component of monetary growth ; on the other hand , v t is not known and is therefore the unpredictable component . |
26 | To illustrate these models we consider a simplified version of the intertemporal substitution model developed above : we shall assume that consumers or demanders have full current information , but suppliers do not . |
27 | In the quantity trading rule for the labour market we shall assume that employment is determined by the demand for labour . |
28 | In deciding what prices to set , firms form expectations ( which , of course , we shall assume are rational ) of what the price level is likely to be in the next two periods . |
29 | Again , for simplicity we shall assume that the price level is believed to remain unchanged over the period of the contract , so we can write : |
30 | We shall assume that output is determined by the minimum of supply and demand , so that with excess supply in both markets , the quantities traded in each will be determined by demand . |