Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] section [pers pn] [modal v] " in BNC.

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1 In the present section we shall consider a cylindrical electron beam of radius a in which the charge density is uniform ( p = Po ) and all electrons travel with velocity v.
2 In the following sections we shall consider ideas of rural and urban life in more detail .
3 In the following section we shall examine the changes that have occurred in the UK economy in the decades leading up to the latest period of structural change , the changes over the post-war period culminating in what is often called the deindustrialization of the UK .
4 It will now be useful to consider the other side of the issue , and in the following section I shall examine the changes in the division of labour and social collectivities which help to explain the general weakening of ‘ class'-party associations .
5 In the following section I shall show that planned reformulations can be justified in terms of style .
6 In the next section we shall look at the position of theists and of atheists when they do not rule out the possibility of dialogue with one another on grounds of unintelligibility , whether the unintelligibility be God-given or humanly made .
7 In this section , we will use weighting factors , whereas in the next section we shall describe a different , and more radical , approach .
8 In the next section we shall examine three examples in more detail .
9 In the next section we shall consider three sceptical arguments which are strong enough to be worth taking seriously .
10 In the next section we will argue that there are circumstances under which people selectively pay attention to certain kinds of information in a mental model , even though other information in the model might be used to interpret the current sentence .
11 In the next section we will look more closely at these apparently conflicting claims in relation to one particular disorder , irritable bowel syndrome or IBS .
12 In the next section we will describe a method for finding all efficient tableaux .
13 We shall continue to make arbitrary choices in this selection but in the next section we will discuss how such choices may be resolved more sensibly . )
14 In the next section we will examine the consequences of not having a rational sentencing policy before asking to what extent the courts are responsible for the ensuing crisis , and what options exist for tackling it .
15 In the next section we will look at the relationship between breadth-first and A* , and a third algorithm , uniform cost , which is also related .
16 In the next section we will examine union policies on this issue and the ways they have been interpreted in signed agreements .
17 Learning from our meandering in the previous section we shall start straight away with Gauss 's law .
18 For example , in the two-period model described in the previous section it would seem likely that if aggregate demand became more volatile firms would become much more reluctant to agree to set prices two periods in advance , and so perhaps they would set prices only one period in advance : the nature of price rigidity would change in response to a change in the economic environment .
19 Finally , in the fourth section I will cover a few miscellaneous topics which I think may be of interest .
20 In the concluding section we shall speculate as to why this might have been .
21 In the last section you should have found that place value is very important .
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