Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] which [pers pn] shall [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 The presentational aspect involves all kinds of different considerations which I shall come to presently , but what they boil down to is this : what can you do to make it easier for the communicator to communicate and the audience to receive the required message — with minimum distraction ?
2 Timber , again , has a high work of fracture — about 10 4 J/m 2 — but this is produced by a totally different mechanism which we shall talk about in Chapter 6 .
3 It has given rise to two different approaches which I shall call the ‘ individual ’ and the ‘ whole curriculum ’ approach .
4 For example , at the end of 1986 a small fund owned and administered by a group of workers in a nationalized industry which we shall call ‘ The General Sickness and Funeral Fund ’ had the following investments : Notes : The figures for the gross yield on equities takes into account the time over which the investment has been held ( unstated ) and can not be used as a holding period return for CAPM as the periods are unequal .
5 My hon. Friend offers me an enticing invitation which I shall consider taking up .
6 For an ideal transformer we need to introduce a separate notation which we shall choose in the form shown in Fig. 4.10 .
7 by the big window , and with especially grand table which we shall paint incidentally paint the paint the er the carving there .
8 In one form or another these different facets of the modern English concept of marriage reappear in most of the cross-cultural examples which I shall mention later though some of the particular forms may strike you as surprising .
9 Entities , being elements of a specifically linguistic domain which we shall call the intensional level , may or may not have a referent in some real or imaginary external world ; we can certainly talk about an entity while uncertain of the existence of any related " thing " in the world about which we are speaking , or even while explicitly rejecting such an existence .
10 There is the question of professional indemnity which I shall return to shortly because I think it might be helpful if the minister were to say something about that .
11 There are , in fact several others but , for various reasons which I shall attempt to explain , I do not feel that they are always quite as effective — or indeed as safe — as the use of the hypnotic state .
12 He thus seems to doubt the realism of his own Realism — an apparent quirk which we shall return to in Chapter 4 , when discussing the relation of realistic description to methods of understanding by means of ideal types .
13 The selected element c is called a prototype for C. The intensional descriptions which we shall come across do not involve prototypes .
14 The tendency for carnivores to get progressively ‘ better ’ would soon run out of steam , as do human arms races ( for reasons of economic cost which we shall come to ) , were it not for the parallel tendency in the prey .
15 As we have now seen , the latter supposition is by no means invariably true , and for this ( and other reasons which we shall come to later ) the ranges of adjectives that can be found in the two positions are actually substantially different .
16 The transnational view undeniably has a point , as do other recent views which we shall mention in a moment .
17 There are many facts about the remote past and the remote future which we shall have no means ever of recognizing or verifying .
18 He proposed an approach to the principled description of such contexts which bears a close resemblance to more recent descriptions which we shall go on to examine :
19 Clearly , there is very great diversity , ranging from sporadic protests , riots and rebellions or coups d'état , to the more continuous activities of organized political parties , but most of these phenomena can , I think , be subsumed under two broad categories which I shall refer to as ‘ social movements ’ and ‘ organized political formations ’ .
20 There are relatively minor differences which I shall point out where they become relevant .
21 The first development of the Keynesian system which we shall consider revolves around the important distinction between classical and Keynesian unemployment and highlights the policy implications which flow from this distinction .
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