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

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1 As for the real problem , we are in the midst of discussions with the Building Societies Association and others and in due course we shall make an announcement that will build on the assistance that we have already provided .
2 In due course we shall see that people 's standard of living hinged broadly on their position in the landholding hierarchy , and it will be necessary to examine this after reviewing the material conditions it enabled them to enjoy .
3 We hope that our continuing work will shed light on these different concepts , and in due course we shall publish our results in medical journals .
4 If I buy any more bloody milk I shall go bonkers !
5 For calculating the magnetic field we shall take the coordinate system shown in Fig. 3.7 , where the z axis coincides with the axis of the solenoid .
6 If I come across any of the aforementioned fish I shall purchase a trio and add them .
7 The aforesaid captain I shall endeavour to keep beside me as my bondsman ; hobbled , and under my eye , he can not do me injury .
8 For both a practical and a theoretical reason I shall concentrate on describing those influences in terms of just four varieties : Standard British English , London English ( henceforth LE ) , Jamaican Standard English and Jamaican Creole ( henceforth JC ) , with emphasis on just two of these , LE and JC .
9 In the concluding section we shall speculate as to why this might have been .
10 In this concluding section I shall try to pull together the preceding discussions of the theory , practice , and policy relating to tacit collusion .
11 … The common ordinary mind is quite unfit to fix for itself what political question it shall attend to ; it is as much as it can do to judge decently of the questions which drift down to it , and are brought before it …
12 In this and the following chapter we shall examine their basic workings as institutions in their own right , and in chapter 16 we shall examine their interaction .
13 In the following chapter we shall encounter another : the recovery of an atomic theory of matter , which played a significant role in the mechanization of nature .
14 In the following months we shall examine some particular examples of renewable energy which have the potential for large-scale exploitation in the U.K. We will also examine at first hand the technology used in the design , construction and operation of modern wind turbines used to generate electricity .
15 In the following examples we shall use Faraday 's law for calculating the e.m.f. in moving loops .
16 In the following sections we shall consider ideas of rural and urban life in more detail .
17 In the following section we shall examine the changes that have occurred in the UK economy in the decades leading up to the latest period of structural change , the changes over the post-war period culminating in what is often called the deindustrialization of the UK .
18 It will now be useful to consider the other side of the issue , and in the following section I shall examine the changes in the division of labour and social collectivities which help to explain the general weakening of ‘ class'-party associations .
19 In the following section I shall show that planned reformulations can be justified in terms of style .
20 As in previous years we shall conduct a nationwide advertising campaign in the early autumn to encourage people to complete and return the electoral registration form .
21 the little bits I shall crush
22 A lengthy discussion of this issue is beyond the scope of this work but given its importance in relation to the socialist project I shall make some comments .
23 Learning from our meandering in the previous section we shall start straight away with Gauss 's law .
24 In the present case we shall take the view that the perception of two distinct types of phrase here can be explained rather simply by a divergence of relation at the intensional level .
25 And it is the moment-to-moment tasks children engage in , that will be the focus for much of the observational assessment we shall need to look at next .
26 And with this proverb he rode on , saying , Friends , by God 's good pleasure we shall return to Castille with great honour and great gain .
27 In the present chapter we shall consider mainly the relations between producers and institutions , and only in that context the question of direct formations .
28 In the present chapter we shall consider terms other than exemption clauses .
29 If this initial survey proves useful and gets good feedback we shall continue and do a series on all our local rivers .
30 The two circumstances have some conditions in common , evidently , but by the general definition of a causal circumstance we shall come to adopt ( 1.5 ) , there are two circumstances .
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