Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] [pron] shall [vb infin] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The origin of the field is , in effect , the magnetic field at the source region of the wind , that is , the surface of the Sun , though this is an extremely complicated phenomenon about which I shall say very little .
2 The Honorary Members were John Couch Adams , the astronomer ; William Crookes , the chemist , of whom we shall hear more ; W. E. Gladstone , Prime Minister again early in that year in the midst of the Irish Home Rule struggles ; John Ruskin ; Lord Tennyson ; A. R. Wallace , the co-discoverer of natural selection ; and G. F. Watts , the painter .
3 Saussure speaks of semiology ( 1974 : 16 ) as a ‘ science that studies the life of signs within society ’ , a science of which we shall hear more in the chapter on modern French structuralism .
4 Other tribal cosmologies exhibit analogous features some of which we shall consider later .
5 I should make it clear at the outset that I act as a parliamentary consultant to the Professional Association of Teachers and that much of what I shall say tonight will be based on the practical experience of PAT members .
6 I begin by joining my right hon. Friend the Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) in lending my full support to the Prime Minister in everything that he said , and in giving my full support to the motion — although I fear that my right hon. Friend the Member for Finchley and I may not be able to agree on other matters , with which I shall deal later .
7 By the time we finish with it we shall have just scratched the surface of the subject .
8 In the time available to me I shall answer as many as possible of the points that have been raised .
9 Once established they underwent a number of evolutionary ‘ bursts ’ in which diverse kinds of reptiles occupied a variety of habitats , the most spectacular of which was the dinosaur radiation in the Mesozoic , to which we shall return later .
10 Finally in this short resumé of the teachers ' predicament , we should mention the more personal factors to which we shall return later in the book : their aspirations , ambitions , values and concerns .
11 In addition there is the complex constitutional position of the constable to which we shall return later .
12 This raises further issues about what is meant by the ‘ importance of manufacturing ’ , and how it should be measured , to which we shall return later .
13 Whether such a prognosis is indeed likely or not is a question to which we shall return shortly , but for the time being let us merely note the danger , which is in any event a very real one , and pass on .
14 He sees part of the answer in the massive recession suffered by the British economy at that time , a point to which we shall return below .
15 It was conceded by counsel for the defendant , necessarily and rightly , that the old offence of larceny by a trick is covered by section 1(1) of the Act of 1968 , as well as by section 15(1) to which we shall refer later , despite what may be called the apparent consent of the victim .
16 Save for one matter , to which I shall refer later , there is no criticism of the judgment or of the order the judge made on the material that was available to him at the time .
17 For reasons to which I shall refer later I do not think that we should do that .
18 However , Mr. Pegg raises a point which relates only to his own appeal , to which I shall refer later .
19 On Mr. Pegg 's behalf , a further more detailed submission is made to which I shall refer later .
20 1.7 , a point of some significance in the context of this essay , and one to which I shall return later ) , or take them to the Temple for the ritual redemption of the first-born ( idem ) ; they were exempt from making the thrice-yearly pilgrimage to Jerusalem at the feasts of Passover , Pentecost and Tabernacles ( Hag .
21 However , while this tells us how not to solve the problem , it is less clear what positive steps we are to take — a dilemma to which I shall return later in the chapter .
22 This is an issue to which I shall return later in this chapter , when I consider relationships between siblings specifically .
23 One important distinction between the two writers is that Bentham became much more favourably disposed towards the prison as a medium of criminal reformation than Beccaria appeared to be ( a point to which I shall return later ) .
24 Perhaps he has been too busy writing letters to his colleagues in the Cabinet — a matter to which I shall return later .
25 There is also a connection between these two , to which I shall come later .
26 Although the use of everyday common-sense beliefs is usually not only unsystematic and inadequate but also often contradictory , if we look more closely at common sense it is likely such explanations of the world are based on what we shall call here ‘ individualistic ’ and/or ‘ naturalistic ’ assumptions .
27 When the time is right to speak about it we shall do so .
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