Example sentences of "shall see [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 As we shall see in a subsequent chapter there is good evidence for this optimism .
2 As we shall see in a later chapter , the issues raised by Papez have yet to be resolved .
3 As we shall see in a later section a woman aged 65 can expect to live for almost another 20 years .
4 As we shall see in a later chapter , much of the same reasoning was to recur towards the end of the 1980s in the search for ways of implementing punishment in the community .
5 As we shall see in a later section , these views are consistent with the current thinking of several British theorists on soccer spectator violence .
6 In order to do so we must go back to the very beginning of society , explain the original trauma and then consider what consequences it has had for modern times ; for , as we shall see in a later chapter , an inability to accept the truth about ourselves and our societies is probably the most dangerous threat to the successful solution of our present cultural crisis and is certainly the chief obstacle to progress in the sciences of man .
7 Ironically , what we also find , as we shall see in a little while , is that when soteriology was really put on the map in the eleventh century much of the drama was lost .
8 As we shall see in the Russian case , it was a common phenomenon , echoing Marx 's description of Lafargue 's internationalism as merely a mechanism for absorbing all in a model French nation .
9 As we shall see in the second part of this chapter , their conflict with the house of Foix was to become a dominant theme of the politics of south-west France .
10 Indeed , as we shall see in the final chapter , one of the principal skills a drama teacher requires is the ability to recognise the potential and suitability of each mode for the particular topic and the particular group and to recognise that the incipient performance mode in dramatic playing and the incipient dramatic playing mode in performance provide the means for an imperceptible movement between the two .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 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 .
14 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 .
15 As we shall see in the following chapters , the division of a turbulent motion into ( interacting ) motions on various length scales is useful because the different scales play rather different roles in the dynamics of the motion .
16 The assumption that all groups in the ‘ not-men ’ class are identical with each other is so firmly rooted that , as we shall see in the fourth section , it is readily assumed even by modern libertarian thinkers that showing that , for example , some ground for distinguishing between men and women is false or irrelevant , immediately commits us to the view that the same ground is irrelevant in distinguishing men from children .
17 As we shall see in the later sections of this chapter , contemporary theories of comprehension give great weight to the way in which information is integrated between sentences .
18 As we shall see in the next chapter , arriving at a balance between these two is often what drama educationalists are seeking .
19 We shall see in the next chapter how carrying comparisons with living animals too far can result in curious and inaccurate pictures of the past .
20 The results were not to be entirely bad , as we shall see in the next section .
21 Put in another way , the same smoothing recipe applied to different time series will produce different resulting shapes for the smooth , which , as we shall see in the next chapter , is not the case when fitting straight lines .
22 In either case , the line thus calculated is only a first approximation , and will be tuned up , as we shall see in the next section .
23 Rather than misdirecting attacks , they repel them altogether , as we shall see in the next chapter . .
24 One of those misled was Trotsky himself , who completely misread the real import of what Bukharin had written , as we shall see in the next chapter .
25 There is also evidence , as we have mentioned before and shall see in the next chapter , of the extensive use of air sacs in sauropods as cooling devices and for reducing mass .
26 Or — as we shall see in the next chapter — perhaps you have payoffs and hidden agendas which are keeping you stuck ?
27 As we shall see in the next chapter , there are those who believe that management have often adopted forms of work organisation which give rise to unsatisfying jobs because it is cheaper for them so to do .
28 It is the argument of Braverman and some other radicals ( though not of most of Braverman 's critics , as we shall see in the next chapter ) that within capitalism the inherently antagonistic relationship between capital and labour inevitably generates a ‘ low trust ’ relationship .
29 We shall see in the next section that partly as a result of secularisation religion has become privatised and inward looking .
30 As we shall see in the next chapter these very high strengths are not in fact confined to glass fibres but can be got from almost any solid , glassy or crystalline .
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