Shall
in sentence
4098 examples of Shall in a sentence
My reason will still not understand why I pray, but I
shall
still pray, and my life, my whole life, independently of anything that may happen to me, is every moment of it no longer meaningless as it was before, but has an unquestionable meaning of goodness with which I have the power to invest it.'
You know I
shall
tell him it's you."
He woke up and replied:"Yes, it will do; we
shall
see to-morrow."
We
shall
see if you will gain that way!
Meanwhile, prop that over again, at once; I
shall
pass to-morrow."
Shall
I try and get you credit somewhere?"
Luckily things are not desperate; I
shall
get out of it somehow."
And as for Montsou, it may continue to go down, we
shall
always get our living out of it.
"Montsou
shall
never have Vandame as long as I am alive.
"I'm speaking in a general way; we
shall
see later.
When
shall
it be?""Wait till the fine weather," replied Maheude, constrainedly.
We
shall
have bread until Saturday, and the best is that he has lent me five francs.
If you keep seven sous we
shall
only have two each."
Then we
shall
see!""Monsieur is quite right," said Madame Rasseneur, who, in her revolutionary violence, was always very polite.
"It will end some day, we
shall
be the masters!"Maheu, who had been mute since the auction, appeared to wake up.
"I
shall
have to go and do for him!
You see if she is confined, and obliged to marry, what
shall
we do for a living then?"
We can snap our fingers at the Company, we
shall
have there a fund to fight against them.
We
shall
never get up to-morrow."
and she uttered a cry of anguish:"My God! we
shall
soon be all dead if this goes on."
"We
shall
see! and you, what do you say about it?"
"We
shall
be quite pleased."
"We
shall
see.""No doubt you are solidly placed, you can wait," Deneulin began to think aloud.
"But as for me, I
shall
be done for if the strike reaches Vandame.
I
shall
have reinstalled Jean-Bart in vain; with a single pit, I can only get along by constant production.
"If you all talk at the same time," said M. Hennebeau, "we
shall
never come to an understanding."
He had regained his calmness, the rough politeness, without bitterness, of an agent who has received his instructions, and means that they
shall
be respected.
But you don't wish to hear, you don't wish to understand.""Yes," said the young man, "we understand very well that our lot will never be bettered as long as things go on as they are going; and that is the reason why some day or another the workers will end by arranging that things
shall
go differently."
He shook his head, and she went on:"I don't know what we
shall
do this week.
It will at once come to our help, and we
shall
pay later on."
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