Example sentences of "we shall [vb infin] " in BNC.

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31 After that we shall move to the three motions and there will be one debate on all three motions .
32 But if nothing concrete emerges , we shall check the backgrounds of every person who stayed in this Lodge last night . ’
33 To complete the single market we shall aim to :
34 Although the word aromatherapy was coined in the 1920s by the French chemist René Gattefossé , first we shall aim the historical telescope much further back in time to The Beginning .
35 So we shall aim to work through definitions towards a richer appreciation of what literary style is and how it can best be analysed .
36 In Part II , we shall aim to give an account of the relation between stylistic choice and significance within a functional framework .
37 Within the lifetime of a future Labour Government — that is , within the next five years — we shall aim to meet the 0.7 per cent .
38 The democratic path is the one that we shall tread , and we shall go where it leads , not where terrorists seek to direct .
39 I hope we shall leave here with a deeper love and , if I dare suggest it , a more confident love .
40 He was never brought to justice , and since he has long since died himself , we shall leave the matter there .
41 We do not know ourselves when we shall leave .
42 The rent has been paid until the twentieth of this month ; we shall leave them as they are until then . ’
43 We shall leave the matter as we have it .
44 We shall leave no stone unturned in our search for the culprit .
45 Dead metaphors have in common with idioms that their constituent elements do not , in the straightforward sense , yield recurrent semantic contrasts : consider , for instance , the contrast stone / knob in We shall leave no — unturned .
46 The question of the unification of the remaining category , gravity , we shall leave till later .
47 We conclude therefore with one further example : ( 28 ) the Algerian supplies have already been loaded On this occasion we shall leave the clarification of the two meanings to the reader .
48 We shall light such a fire today in England that , by God 's grace , it will never be put out . ’
49 We shall reassemble at er five minutes to seven .
50 But we shall mistake its real substance if we begin with the cult of saints and relics seen , as they were seen in the Reformation , in terms of channels through which a distant , concealed world of the holy is made present and accessible .
51 We shall label these according to the scale and means as follows :
52 In this way we shall transform music into another transcendent oasis .
53 The cultural conquest of the countryside by the towns and of oral by literate culture was the prime aim of the press , and we shall examine this role in more detail .
54 We shall examine these in turn , relating them to specific national situations .
55 In late 1988 the right was rendered well-nigh obsolete in Northern Ireland , by changes that were introduced without any consultation — we shall examine this further in Chapter 7 .
56 Then we shall examine how these laws were utilized to deal with large-scale public protest during the 1980s .
57 We shall examine how they arrived at an indicator of relative need for non-psychiatric hospital in-patient services ( which accounts for over half of the total NHS budget ) .
58 In this chapter , we shall examine the nature of these two concepts and estimate their value for teachers .
59 It is here , therefore , that we shall examine Bukharin 's use of the concepts of simple and expanded reproduction ( which Marx used in volumes I and II of Capital ) in the exchanges between society and nature .
60 We shall examine the difficulties they encountered in a later chapter ( pp. 354 ff . ) .
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