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

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1 I shall stay in Paris .
2 ‘ If there are any , I shall remain in bed , ’ retorted the Doctor , wiping the sweat through the only two remaining tufts of white hair above his ears .
3 Unless the court otherwise directs , money received or paid into court in respect of persons under disability shall remain in court and be invested or dealt with as the court thinks fit , which in many cases may be its transfer to the High Court ( Ord 10 , r 11(1) — ( 3 ) ) .
4 Therefore , it is appropriate to insert such safeguarding words as : So long as the buyer shall remain in possession of the lease and shall not have assigned the same .
5 ( 4 ) The closure order shall remain in force until such time as the board satisfied that the matters which led to the closure order have been satisfactorily remedied .
6 ( 5 ) An order under subsection ( 4 ) above shall remain in force until such time as the board is satisfied that the matters which led to the order have been satisfactorily remedied .
7 It is envisaged that these arrangements shall remain in force until initial expressions of interest have been received and analysed and a decision taken regarding the handling of the next stage of the formal sale process .
8 It may order that the decision shall not have effect pending appeal or that the care or supervision order shall remain in force for the appeal period but subject to the court 's directions ( s40(3) ) .
9 To this end we have just agreed to sell the Great Tower Street office to an overseas investor for £18.4 million and we shall remain in place as the head tenant .
10 The danger arises if you happen to arrive at what was for you a distressing time and there is no one there to help you deal with it in the way I shall describe in Chapter 2 .
11 At that stage my priorities lay elsewhere , and to start playing with inhibitors seemed a diversion — when I have turned to using them , in the late eighties , as I shall describe in Chapter 10 , it was with rather more specific goals in mind .
12 There are several alleged mechanisms of reduction , which we shall discuss in turn .
13 I shall discuss in detail the underlying issue of the culture-ideology of consumerism and the role of the TNCs in it , in the next chapter .
14 As I shall discuss in Chapter 9 , more long-lasting changes in gene activation are involved in the differentiation of cells in higher organisms , for example the differences between cells in the kidney , liver , intestine and so on .
15 In addition to these complications of overlapping jurisdictions within the locality , local government itself is constrained by central government influence and control in a manner we shall discuss in Chapter 10 .
16 For reasons that we shall discuss in Chapter 9 , the members of a colony of social insects co-operate with one another , and they will therefore give signal that are as informative as possible ; they will not usually give deceptive signals to fellow members of their colony .
17 The earliest part of curve B corresponds to this , then there is a lull , and then a broad peak in bombardment from a fresh supply of small bodies the possible nature of which I shall discuss in section 8.2 .
18 We shall need in time to check which belong to people who had a right to handle the diary ; Sir Paul , yourself , members of the household .
19 ( Whether or not any evaluator should follow such practices is an issue we shall explore in Part Three . )
20 Even in the more structured work of surveys HM Inspectors still rely upon informal and holistic methods rather than observation schedules ( a topic we shall consider in Part Three in relation to observation methods ) .
21 We shall consider in Section 4.2 what precisely is the intensional structure for this interpretation .
22 The ‘ grain boundaries ’ and dislocations can have a strong effect on subsequent developments — as we shall consider in Section 22.6 .
23 This was clearly the case in the Central Agricultural Region , which we shall consider in Chapter 2 .
24 We shall consider in chapter 7 a more fundamental econometric problem with the Lucas study which casts doubt on the interpretation which Lucas puts on his results .
25 We shall win in Brent and Ealing , where we have already turfed out the Labour party , and marginal seats in Wandsworth and Westminster , where people have seen the benefits of Conservative government .
26 As we shall show in Chapter 8 , the Labour Party entered office in 1974 with a radical programme but in severe economic conditions that restricted the freedom of manoeuvre enjoyed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and his cabinet colleagues .
27 On landing there he angrily refused to negotiate and demanded to be taken to Sweden and then the United States , warning in a note : ‘ We shall land in New York together , or die together . ’
28 The window in the Thun Chapel ( 3 ) is after a sketch by František Kysela of 1928–9 , ‘ Those Who Sow in Tears shall Reap in Joy ’ .
29 This we shall do in Section 3.7 .
30 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 .
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