Example sentences of "we will [verb] at " in BNC.

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1 Thus we will arrive at the context from the passages rather than the passages from the context .
2 We will arrive at 1.30 pm with two vehicles , an estate car registration number B754 XHX and a van registration number RGR 425V .
3 Depending upon what view of human nature we take then we will arrive at different explanations of what motivates us .
4 Therefore to suggest that an undertaking of this enormity with its potential to contribute to various national and word ; d development activities should be allowed to become the vehicle for economic experimentation or the advancement of narrow short term profit motivation without proper examination of the alternatives , is clearly a path which we will tread at our peril .
5 We will stop at fourth normal form !
6 We will meet at Fortingall tomorrow , and let us make it the biggest meeting of all — the Glen Lyon folk will join us there , and once Breadalbane joins with Atholl , then they will know that the whole people is on thy move .
7 We can afford to bide our time , unless Dortmund show signs of nervousness , in which case we will go at them . ’
8 Yes members of the jury we will resume at two o'clock , erm because I have other duties later on this afternoon we 'll have to finish at four o'clock today , it may help you to know that , it may help council to know that as well .
9 We will call at a time that suits you — even if that 's an evening or a Sunday and we guarantee to repair or replace faulty equipment within 24 hours of your call .
10 We will look at the new Channel in relation to existing television whether broadcast , satellite or cable .
11 For the remainder of this one we will look at his account of personal identity and the mind , and then at his political philosophy .
12 Human activities , now , are upsetting this dialogue , and we will look at how we are changing the atmosphere , ever so slightly but none the less crucially , in ways that could endanger all of life .
13 We will look at each beatitude in turn .
14 Once we have cleared the loan we will look at ways to buy our own premises with the help of our Small Self-Administered Scheme , so our Corporate and Pensions Planning go hand in hand . ’
15 In Chapter 3 we will look at specific examples of criminal behaviour , and will discuss and criticise some of the common assumptions about the nature and extent of crime in contemporary society .
16 Similarly , we will look at female crime and the reasons why this makes up such a small proportion of known criminality .
17 Functionalist theory is not just one overall explanation or interpretation , and the examples we will look at have quite distinct emphases .
18 To examine the truth and relevance of these notions , we will look at juvenile delinquency , in particular hooliganism and vandalism .
19 Firstly , we will look at the history of delinquency and will refer in some detail to Geoffrey Pearson 's recent study , Hooligan : A history of respectable fears , and his attempt to locate the supposed ‘ golden age ’ of a traditional way of life based on respect for law and order and all forms of authority .
20 Secondly , we will look at modern delinquency , and specifically football hooliganism .
21 In particular , we will look at why the delinquent response is attractive to working-class male youth .
22 Levi classifies various sub-types of such fraud , although for our purposes we will look at this type of corporate crime in general terms .
23 To gain an impression of the extent of employee theft , we will look at a study of fiddling and pilferage at a medium-sized factory-production bakery in south-east England , undertaken by Jason Ditton ( 1977 ) .
24 We will look at sociological explanations for the under-representation of females in criminal activity .
25 We will consider , firstly , the question of omission ; then we will examine the issues concerned with bias in the statistics ; and thirdly we will look at attempts to overcome some of the problems with the official criminal statistics .
26 ‘ First of all we will look at his numerical and mathematical ability which he has gained from reckoning areas from odd shaped bits of land and working out the number of trees they will take , and from his mother 's shopping expeditions , and we will reduce these to simple symbolic formulas and tables and make children learn a lot of them very quickly .
27 Secondly , we will look at the pagan links via the mason 's name for God .
28 One of the main ‘ weapons ’ retailers use in their battle for customers is advertising , and we will look at this in the next section .
29 A different kind of limitation is set by the third condition and it is this which we will look at now .
30 We will look at the evidence — such as it is — for each of these explanations .
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