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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Taking the case of social class as an example of a more general difficulty associated with speaker variables , I shall comment in the following sections in rather less detail on sex and ethnicity .
2 As I shall explain in the next section , this earlier privileging of intellect was intimately connected with resistance to nominalism , and , in the seventeenth century nominalism triumphed .
3 They favoured unitary authorities for most of England though , as we shall explain in the next chapter , this recommendation was never implemented .
4 In John 's Gospel , Jesus , when asked to identify the man who will betray him , answers , ‘ It is the one to whom I give the piece of bread that I shall dip in the dish . ’
5 I shall stay in the forest . ’
6 Suddenly Geoffrey said , ‘ I 'm not sure I shall stay in the theatre .
7 And his widow shall pay relief and shall remain in the said tenement undisturbed , doing the services .
8 These channels make the membrane permeable to ions or molecules , which can then enter the cell and act as signals for the initiation of the biochemical cascades which ultimately lead , in ways that I shall describe in the next chapter , to the synthesis of new synaptic membrane components and hence to synaptic remodelling .
9 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , there is a lot more work to be done before the causal process underlying this relationship is laid bare : we do not know whether it is through buying a better diet or better medical care , for example , that richer countries improve their life expectancy .
10 Does the future lie with ‘ demythologised ’ , ‘ secular ’ or revamped Liberal theology of the kinds we shall discuss in the following chapters ?
11 Some of the implications of this observation , both for my own research and for the dominant disease model of child abuse , I shall discuss in the following section .
12 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , this is a question that has concerned pluralists much more .
13 It was worked out by the Austrian ethologist Karl von Frisch in the middle of this century , by methods we shall discuss in the next section .
14 Twice in the account they hear the terrible words , ‘ … your dead bodies shall fall in the wilderness . ’
15 When you act for buyers who intend that a leasehold interest shall merge in the freehold ( leaseholders buying the freehold reversion on their lease , or freeholders buying the lease to which their title is subject ) it 's convenient to express the intention to merge in the transfer or other instrument vesting the second estate in the owner of the first if this is intended , but beware of such an application in the case of a flat — if , for example , your client owns a leasehold flat and buys the freehold of the whole building in which it is situate .
16 19 Lord The Lord Ordinary having considered the Petition and proceedings , no Answers having been lodged , Nominates and Appoints to be curator bonis to designed in the Petition with the usual powers and decerns ; authorises the said after finding caution to enter on the duties of his office upon a certified copy of this interlocutor with a schedule of the curatory estate annexed thereto ; and that upon condition that before issue of a certified copy interlocutor of his appointment he shall lodge in the hands of the Accountant of Court a bond binding himself to lodge Accounts annually with the Accountant of Court and otherwise to conduct the affairs of the curatory estate in all respects in conformity with the laws and practice of Scotland ; to appear before the Lords of Council and Session in Scotland to answer for his conduct as curator aforesaid or in connection with any matter arising out of said curatory ; to submit himself to and prorogate the jurisdiction of the Court of Session for said purposes and to assign an address in Scotland where he may be cited , and decerns ( * Finds the expenses of this application and procedure following thereon to form a proper charge upon the curatory estate , and remits the account thereof , when lodged , to the Auditor of Court for taxation ) .
17 As we shall explore in the next chapter , it can be an experience that is both liberating and protecting .
18 His proposed mechanisms we shall explore in the next chapter .
19 The history of Marxist anthropology since The Origin has , as a result , been the difficult , painful , and incomplete recovery of Marxism for pre-capitalist social formations , and the story of this process is what we shall consider in the second half of this book .
20 The rise of unemployment up to 1986 raises many questions about the distribution of income in society , which we shall consider in the final part of this chapter .
21 In the case of a request by a person other than an individual natural person that the licensing board shall declare the provisional grant of a licence final , that person shall include in the notice in subsection ( 5 ) above the name of the employee or agent whom it is intended should have the day to day running of the premises , and the board shall not declare the provisional grant final if it finds that the employee or agent so named in the notice is not a fit and proper person to be the holder of a licence .
22 We shall assume in the discussion which follows that an ideal , well-formed proportional series is open .
23 As we have already mentioned , and as we shall reiterate in the next chapter , the distinction between these two forms of insanity is probably more a matter of psychiatric convenience than aetiological reality .
24 He shall enclose in the field 32 feet length of fencing which he shall cut and gather in the park for 1 work .
25 As we shall show in the later sections , a great deal of the activities of the fans can be understood as symbolic activities in the mode of metonymy .
26 For an ideal transformer we need to introduce a separate notation which we shall choose in the form shown in Fig. 4.10 .
27 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 .
28 The numbers of staff that we shall employ in the new office will be those needed to discharge the duties set out in clause 2 .
29 As we shall see in the next chapter , arriving at a balance between these two is often what drama educationalists are seeking .
30 The more heightened the form of that communication , as we shall see in the illustration that follows , the nearer the participant is to reaching the performance mode within dramatic playing .
  Next page