Example sentences of "shall [verb] in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Taking the case of social class as an example of a more general difficulty associated with speaker variables , I shall comment in the following sections in rather less detail on sex and ethnicity .
2 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 .
3 They favoured unitary authorities for most of England though , as we shall explain in the next chapter , this recommendation was never implemented .
4 And his widow shall pay relief and shall remain in the said tenement undisturbed , doing the services .
5 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 .
6 Does the future lie with ‘ demythologised ’ , ‘ secular ’ or revamped Liberal theology of the kinds we shall discuss in the following chapters ?
7 Some of the implications of this observation , both for my own research and for the dominant disease model of child abuse , I shall discuss in the following section .
8 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 .
9 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , this is a question that has concerned pluralists much more .
10 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 .
11 As we shall explore in the next chapter , it can be an experience that is both liberating and protecting .
12 His proposed mechanisms we shall explore in the next chapter .
13 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 .
14 The rise of unemployment up to 1986 raises many questions about the distribution of income in society , which we shall consider in the final part of this chapter .
15 Local planning authorities ( county councils in this case ) are required by s.7(3) ( a ) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 to include in their structure plans , ‘ measures for the improvement of the physical environment ’ , whilst s.11(3) ( a ) of the above Act , a less demanding provision , states that they , ( usually district councils in this case ) shall include in a local plan such measures as the authority thinks fit for the improvement of the physical environment .
16 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 .
17 I 'm speaking here of the period of conventional warfare by the way , this is not the case with nuclear war as I shall show in a later lecture .
18 As we shall show in the later sections , a great deal of the activities of the fans can be understood as symbolic activities in the mode of metonymy .
19 Medical science was not yet equipped for investigation into near-death experiences , to which we shall refer in the final chapter ; almost the only form of resuscitation with which doctors were familiar was that following near-fatal immersion in water , accompanied , as it often is , by a rapid replay of the victim 's life .
20 The numbers of staff that we shall employ in the new office will be those needed to discharge the duties set out in clause 2 .
21 As we shall see in a subsequent chapter there is good evidence for this optimism .
22 As we shall see in a later chapter , the issues raised by Papez have yet to be resolved .
23 As we shall see in a later section a woman aged 65 can expect to live for almost another 20 years .
24 As we shall see in a later chapter , much of the same reasoning was to recur towards the end of the 1980s in the search for ways of implementing punishment in the community .
25 As we shall see in a later section , these views are consistent with the current thinking of several British theorists on soccer spectator violence .
26 In order to do so we must go back to the very beginning of society , explain the original trauma and then consider what consequences it has had for modern times ; for , as we shall see in a later chapter , an inability to accept the truth about ourselves and our societies is probably the most dangerous threat to the successful solution of our present cultural crisis and is certainly the chief obstacle to progress in the sciences of man .
27 Ironically , what we also find , as we shall see in a little while , is that when soteriology was really put on the map in the eleventh century much of the drama was lost .
28 As we shall see in the Russian case , it was a common phenomenon , echoing Marx 's description of Lafargue 's internationalism as merely a mechanism for absorbing all in a model French nation .
29 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 .
30 Indeed , as we shall see in the final chapter , one of the principal skills a drama teacher requires is the ability to recognise the potential and suitability of each mode for the particular topic and the particular group and to recognise that the incipient performance mode in dramatic playing and the incipient dramatic playing mode in performance provide the means for an imperceptible movement between the two .
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