Example sentences of "shall see in [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But we shall see in 200 years if I am right . ’
2 By the time transformational rules ( if they are really operating — which is theoretically contentious , as we shall see in due course ) enter the picture , we can expect even more linguistic material to be available for reshaping , re-ordering and relocating .
3 It is true that the paper plans , as set out in the award made by the commissioners , did not produce all the physical changes at once , as we shall see in due course ; but the transformation of the landscape was , all the same , remarkably swift .
4 Such a view reminds us — as we shall see in greater detail in the next chapter — that there is an odd paradox where the ‘ moral ’ qualities of God are concerned .
5 President Nyerere of Tanzania ( as we shall see in greater detail later ) has taken the view that , in a country faced with problems of poverty , ignorance , disease and underdevelopment on a gigantic scale , press freedom should be limited just as it has been in the liberal democracies in wartime .
6 As we shall see in more detail in the next chapter , there are many features of such conditions that make them quite obviously inimical to the creative act .
7 However , we have already pointed out , by implication , one very important syntactic consequence : only the ascriptive adjectives are eligible to appear predicatively , that is , in a position like that of hungry in : ( 19 ) the antelopes are hungry As was already indicated in Chapter 1 , and as we shall see in more detail in Chapter 3 , predicative position is the surface structure which expresses the intensional relation of assignment , and assignment does require that the property of the adjective should be construed as applied to the entity of the subject noun phrase .
8 On a deeper level , however , as we shall see in later chapters , the identity category ‘ Catholic ’ is , for the majority of policemen and women , not an all-inclusive typification in which every Catholic is categorized alike .
9 The echoes of that conflict reverberate around us still , though as we shall see in later chapters , the issues need not be posed in quite the fashion of the Age of Reason .
10 As we shall see in later chapters the public sector is making increasing use of performance indicators in order to assess the effect of policies .
11 We shall see in later chapters how this conception shaped many of the uses of the social survey , to mention but one example .
12 As we shall see in later sections , HARPY made sure , by structuring the grammar in particular ways , that a narrow portion would occur soon enough to prevent a combinatorial explosion of hypotheses .
13 This result has many useful consequences , as we shall see in subsequent sections .
14 As we shall see in subsequent case studies , this problem is likely to reappear .
15 As we shall see in subsequent chapters , the approach they have taken to fundamental freedoms has on a number of important occasions been radically different and altogether more liberal than has been the case here .
16 As we shall see in subsequent chapters , a wide range of managerial decision making was subject to ministerial intervention , while over substantial areas of ‘ general ’ policy ministerial views made no significant impact .
17 As we shall see in subsequent chapters , elite and pluralist theories locate power in areas of social and political life very different from those put forward in Marxist accounts .
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