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

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1 There are many facts about the remote past and the remote future which we shall have no means ever of recognizing or verifying .
2 He shall enclose in the field 32 feet length of fencing which he shall cut and gather in the park for 1 work .
3 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 .
4 ( It is a story which we shall tell in the following chapter . )
5 Lucas has advanced certain ingenious theoretical devices to explain the phenomenon of persistence which we shall examine later in this chapter .
6 ( vi ) On unc the relation R defined by ( a , b ) R ( c , d ) iff ad = bc is an equivalence relation of a kind which we shall meet again in the proof of 3.10.3 .
7 However , I would not be here were it not for the Certificate which I shall outline briefly to you .
8 So can we now move in the formal sense to looking at the next issue for discussion , which covers policy H two , the Greater York new settlement , and the first part of the issue which we shall address is , does the proposed Greater York new settlement represent an appropriate and justified policy response to the assessed development land requirements of the Greater York area , and I 'll ask Mr Davis to make his introductory statement .
9 There are aspects of the funding council which we shall seek to change in the other place .
10 The last type of assistance which I shall discuss here is emotional and moral support , by which I mean listening , talking , giving advice , and helping people to put their own lives in perspective .
11 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 .
12 ( Though there are substantial deviations from this profile which we shall refer to below . )
13 This is usually taken to reflect a generalized normative expectation that women are the appropriate carers ; although empirical evidence about normative expectations is actually fairly sparse ( a point which I shall take up in chapter 5 ) .
14 The definition of price stickiness which we shall employ in this section does not in fact alter very much the policy implications of the model developed in the previous chapter , although it may have implications for the test of that model .
15 ( This is but one aspect of the possibilities of the micro as a research tool in education , a subject of importance which we shall discuss further elsewhere . )
16 Both these differences suggest the importance of a distinction which I shall come back to later : attitudes to the role of housewife are in principle not the same thing as feelings about housework .
17 And my Will is to be Buried in Linen in a Suit which I shall provide for that purpose And I do hereby order and direct that the Sum of Ten Pounds shall be paid to the person who shall be the last in attending me to the time of my expiring and who shall see me Inclosed and laid in my Coffin in Linen .
18 Erm the next item is similar to that education which I shall speak to you later and then erm at the moment .
19 They place a predictable emphasis on language ( particularly English ) and on Mathematics , an emphasis which we shall see intensified in the actual curriculum .
20 This difference may account for the fact that although there is now a great deal of empirical evidence linking monetary or aggregate demand shocks to real output fluctuations — evidence which we shall discuss in later chapters — the evidence that unexpected price changes affect output is much weaker ( see , for example , Fair , 1979 )
21 Sir , we are much obliged to you for your consideration upon this matter , and I assure you that I shall do my best to avoid in the evidence which I shall give and in my other remarks apparently proposing a washed-over status for the village as a whole .
22 An important collection of exempla which we shall have reason to refer to on several occasions is the Disciplina Clericalis , an early twelfth-century collection of instructive tales put together by Petrus Alphonsus , a converted Jew , for his son .
23 Practical support provides the third example which I shall use in this discussion of patterns of support in the past .
24 It would indeed hound him for ever , and inspire the many references in dialogue to his father which we shall encounter , and his ambiguous sense of direction and self-fulfilment .
25 There are promising aspects about the causal theory , and the theory which I shall support can in fact be seen as a generalization from it .
26 The net effect of foreign TNCs on UK unemployment is a hotly debated topic which we shall hope to resolve in later chapters .
27 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 .
28 In this book the enforcement of regulation is analysed in terms of two major systems or strategies of enforcement which I shall call compliance and sanctioning .
29 The sea served Armstrong as a background to adventures with a more mature approach to character and circumstance , in books like Island Odyssey , a tale set in Crete in 1941 , The Mutineers , in which a setting resembling Easter Island backs up a narrative strongly resembling Lord of the Flies , and The Albatross , a striking version of Chaucer 's Pardoner 's Tale which I shall return to .
30 This is the method which I shall adopt .
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