Example sentences of "[pers pn] shall [verb] [prep] the [num ord] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I shall refer to the first case as Mr. A. He wrote to me in March saying :
2 The suggestion that though God is to be conceived as male , humanity is to be understood as female in relation to God , I shall leave until the next chapter .
3 I shall vote against the Third Reading of the Bill tonight , but my intention is not to deprive the north of access to the channel tunnel .
4 I shall return in the last part of this book to discuss the realistic potential for both the renewables and conservation in more detail and within a non-nuclear energy policy .
5 I shall stay until the next General Election when I would expect they will select a new candidate at South Derbyshire . ’
6 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 .
7 I shall deal with the second part of the hon. Gentleman 's question later in my speech .
8 I shall deal with the second recommendation first , because it is based upon a complete misunderstanding .
9 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 .
10 The survivors are shown in Figure 5.2 ( along with certain isotopes of H , C and N to which I shall turn in the next section ) .
11 I shall argue in the next chapter that it is part of a teacher 's duties to attempt to redress the balance between children who have and those who have not the advantages of a supportive home .
12 As you shall see in the next section , the predominance of hydrogen in Jupiter means that it does not have to have high interior temperatures to be liquid .
13 Its most striking answer in International Relations has been systems theory , which we shall examine in the next chapter .
14 You should also note , in using hedging and qualifying expressions , that they will affect the overall tone or REGISTER of your essay ( as we shall examine in the next chapter ) .
15 ‘ I can not guarantee we shall legislate in the next session since one never can — it is always understood that a final decision is taken nearer the Queen 's speech , ’ Mr Lang said
16 British imperial and industrial success appeared unlimited , but in fact was already being compromised by long-term processes of economic and political change , which we shall outline in the next two sections .
17 They favoured unitary authorities for most of England though , as we shall explain in the next chapter , this recommendation was never implemented .
18 We shall return to the second part of the old horseman 's description : here it is necessary to emphasize that he used it in an exceptional way .
19 Daraprim ( pyrimethamine ) , a very different substance , evolved some years later from research of more general significance , to which we shall return in the next chapter .
20 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 .
21 Hence Behaviouralism , the version of a more general behaviourism specific to International Relations , which we shall meet in the next chapter , is commonly spoken of as a Positive approach and often contrasted with Realism on this score .
22 Some products and places provide a few exceptions to this pattern , as we shall discover in the next chapter , and there were considerable , if patchy and delayed , efforts towards ‘ re-industrialization ’ ( Chapter 10 ) , which created the estimated increase of manufacturing employment across all regions of the North from 1987 to 1989 , averaging 1.4 per cent , probably arrested by 1990 .
23 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 .
24 The Spirit is no less than the personal , moral , active power of the Lord God , and for the further revelation of his nature we must await Act Two , the coming of Jesus , to which we shall turn in the next chapter .
25 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 .
26 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , this is a question that has concerned pluralists much more .
27 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 .
28 As we shall see in the second part of this chapter , their conflict with the house of Foix was to become a dominant theme of the politics of south-west France .
29 The assumption that all groups in the ‘ not-men ’ class are identical with each other is so firmly rooted that , as we shall see in the fourth section , it is readily assumed even by modern libertarian thinkers that showing that , for example , some ground for distinguishing between men and women is false or irrelevant , immediately commits us to the view that the same ground is irrelevant in distinguishing men from children .
30 As we shall see in the next chapter , arriving at a balance between these two is often what drama educationalists are seeking .
  Next page