Example sentences of "in the [adj] chapter [subord] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Additional criticisms , some from outside the radical perspective , have been made , but we deal with these in the next chapter where we put forward an alternative conceptual framework within which to consider the issues .
2 This picture is added to in the next chapter where we examine the informal relations that exist within organisations , and in Chapter 6 where we examine power .
3 We need to bear this in mind in the next chapter when we consider some of the problems of lexical retrieval experienced by patients exhibiting an acquired language disorder .
4 We will deal with optical discs more fully in the next chapter when we examine the technological environment in which multimedia is emerging and , for the moment , will concentrate on gaining some sense of the way in which the use of optical disc information systems is expanding .
5 We shall meet some more molar quantities in the next chapter when we come to consider thermodynamic quantities .
6 I will expand on this dichotomy between the clean and the polluted in the next chapter when I detail the ethnography of being a ‘ real polis ’ ; however , these few examples indicate the cultural preference and the conceptual challenge which our appearance must have presented as we embraced aspects of the bodily style of our ‘ counter-cultural ’ antagonists .
7 The first , straightforward , prerequisite is to distinguish this clearly from the postnominal attributive position which we discussed in the previous chapter since they are , after all , superficially identical as sequences .
8 This is important and it is an issue which we will address in the coming chapters as we attempt to separate out the problems for both users and their community and whether the source of the problem is with heroin use or its legal and social status .
9 Perhaps the most moving sentence in the whole book comes in the last chapter as he takes his leave of his reader : ‘ For it is not what you are nor what you have been that God regards with his most merciful eyes , but what you would like to be . ’
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