Example sentences of "how it [modal v] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Then the strategy ‘ cooperate with your neighbour if he cooperates ; otherwise defect ’ would be an ESS , although I have some difficulty in seeing how it would evolve in the first place .
2 We will canvass views on how such a lottery should be run and controlled , and how it would fit within the pattern of charitable fund-raising in Britain .
3 Warm things are said in the flush of the campaign but now that it 's over the first question the Tories should ask is how it would look to the country if a victorious party launched into a frontal assault on the BBC in the wake of its victory .
4 As it turns out , our long way round through the deaf community , its history , sign language , memory and interpreting has given us an understanding of the concept of Total Communication and of how it might fit into the world of deaf people .
5 The CNAA had to decide not only the merits of the particular case , but whether it would be willing and able ( under its Charter ) to validate a teachers ' certificate as well as a degree , and how it might relate to the Area Training Organizations which had some responsibility for the teaching practice component of existing courses .
6 His undergraduates were thus given a sense of the progression of medical knowledge , and of how it might develop in the future .
7 Psychobiology is particularly exciting at the moment because advances in instrumentation are bringing us new ways of studying the brain while areas like artificial intelligence are providing new ways of thinking about how it might work as the ‘ organ of behaviour ’ .
8 This is followed by a question on how it will change over the next twelve months .
9 Mrs Thatcher told the Soviet minister yesterday that Britain is not opposed to the idea of a pan-European summit , but the participants must agree on how it will fit into the building of the ‘ new European architecture . ’
10 Think in advance about using Dacron tape for a spar pocket , and how it will fit into the plan of the kite , taking the ripstop into the pocket , not outside !
11 Mr Prescott , 42 , will set up the track organisation in Scotland , work out its commercial and planning structure and how it will relate to the train operating company and any remnants of BR .
12 Mr Prescott , 42 , will set up the track organisation in Scotland and work out its structure and how it will relate to the train-operating firm and any British Rail remnants .
13 As the nursing profession waits to hear how it will do in the next pay round , there are fears that job evaluation could be used to take significant numbers of nurses out of current pay and grading structures , creating new pay set-ups unique to each different trust or unit .
14 If you are going to fly your glider efficiently while turning steeply in thermals with other gliders , you need to know how it will behave at the stall .
15 We consider below the implications this result has for policy , and in chapter 6 we show how it can serve as the basis for an empirical test of the model .
16 Additionally , the Board will investigate how it can help in the development and distribution of GNVQs , possibly through cooperation with other awarding bodies .
17 Sometimes a bale of cloth went and you wondered how it could get past the Dock gate .
18 Back in 1952 the then Home Secretary , Sir David Maxwell Fyfe , laid down specific guidelines to the Director-General of MI5 as to how it should operate in the future .
19 ‘ It will provide a showcase to business people of all the attributes the industry has in Scotland and how they can be used , while getting a real exchange going as to how it should develop in the future . ’
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