Example sentences of "[prep] the [num ord] chapter " in BNC.

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1 Because of Berkeley 's criticisms of them , Locke 's views on language and abstract ideas , views which were implicit in the discussion of nominal essences , are best left for the next chapter .
2 Together with the previous chapter 's review of country risk this should provide a sound foundation for the next chapter on the external debt problem .
3 However , to pursue this would lead on to criticisms of inductivism that I have reserved for the next chapter .
4 Because the discussion of these criteria is associated with a fresh and more promising period in the history of memory research , and also symbolizes the point in my own research trajectory at which I switched from working on imprinting to an even simpler form of learning in the young chick , they can appropriately form the starting-point for the next chapter .
5 My interpretation of what is going on at the present day is being saved for the next chapter , but some of the most startling results come from the latest ( and most accurately dated ) deposits .
6 She fell asleep with her mind determinedly focused on plans for the next chapter .
7 The company was , inexorably , being positioned for a further dramatic stage in its development , and Laura was uneasy about the next chapter in their own story .
8 These are the subject of the fifth chapter .
9 This example could be read as ‘ light shineth ’ in a transcription of the first chapter of St John 's Gospel .
10 In the first paragraph of the first chapter of his Description of Greece , Pausanias mentions the silver mines of Attica , at Laurion in the south-east .
11 I gave him a draft of the first chapter and explained that I wanted it to be the sort of book that would sell in airport book stalls .
12 Hence it forms the subject of the first chapter of this Part .
13 ‘ We did a big campaign , with WHS in particular , and gave away free extracts of the first chapter in the shops .
14 The object of the first chapter was to draw attention to the basic oddity of the stratigraphical record in that particular facies were remarkably widespread during particular periods of geological time .
15 You know sometimes the way forward is backward , there are no short cuts with god , if he 's leading along a certain path and were disobedient , there 's no way we can opt out of it and join the trail further along , he does n't allow it , its back to where we left it , that 's were we 've got ta get back to , we ca n't skip an experience , we ca n't miss any thing out , we 've got to go back to where we start , where we were when we left the trail and Naomi has to do just that to go back to Bethlehem , that 's the way forward for her , and you see because we all , we always find this if we are really children of god , then we can never ever be satisfied away from the will of god , there 's nothing else that meets our need , its god will or nothing , you know , when we know frustration in our lives , when we know sort of the , these annoyances and , and , and , and er sense of frustration there , its not because god is leaving us that way its invariably cos we have actually gone out of gods will because he 's will is not frustrated , its satisfying , can I just , it will only really be headings this morning , just leave us with three brief headings in this little incident that we 'll read or we , we wo n't read the whole passage but its , er in the remainder of the , or more or less the whole of the remainder of the first chapter tha that the cost was involved and then the choices that were made and then the commitment , the cost that was involved Naomi had to pay something , you see before she could return to Naomi she had to con , before Naomi sorry could return er to , to Bethlehem , she had to acknowledge she 'd done wrong , she had failed , she had sinned , she had to acknowledge she had made a mistake now in fairness to Naomi she did it and she excepted her responsibility , she did n't try and shift the blame on
16 I 'm , I 'm personally delighted to be here er it 's almost er like er page out of the first chapter of er I think the should be expressed to those of you here and any who are missing er for undertaking this magnificent project .
17 Dickens also makes good use of symbolism and the most obvious example of this occurs at the end of the first chapter with the convict walking towards the gibbet and the beacon which are symbols of death and life .
18 And there 's , towards the end of the first chapter there 's a bit all about erm erm er temptation and deliver us from evil kind of thing which is obviously rather from the , from the Lord 's Prayer and yet it 's , rather explained rather nicely and it , it 's a lovely , lovely book !
19 This is the subject of the seventh chapter .
20 But of all I had read so far , nothing troubled me more than two notes I encountered towards the end of the seventh chapter .
21 To return to the second point about church growth made at the end of the second chapter , ‘ demand ’ is not the only factor in church growth ; one must also consider supply , and the Free Church was gradually coming into the position where it could service the new demand .
22 The goal of the second chapter , which examines judicial and police arrangements , is twofold : to describe the administrative setting in which crime was committed and repressed , and to put forward an interpretation of the legal system .
23 This is the subject of the second chapter , which sets out three basic criteria that need to be fulfilled for recognition to be appropriate .
24 Heyward has a Christology ( one close to the primitive Christology of the second chapter of Acts for example ) .
25 She tried to learn the Book of Job by heart , but never got safely past the end of the second chapter ; the first two chapters were on the dull side , overloaded with yoke of oxen and she-asses , with Eliphaz the Temanite , Bildad the Shuhite , and Zophar the Naamathite , Job 's comforters .
26 These are the subject of the fourth chapter .
27 This is the subject of the eighth chapter .
28 These , exemplified from drama , are the subject of the sixth chapter .
29 The end of the last chapter was , you might think , a suitable place to end the book , but it was n't , properly speaking , the end of my blue period .
30 To echo the themes of the last chapter , a part of a policeman 's discretion is , in Schutzian terminology , knowing which ‘ recipes ’ to apply to which members of the public in what situations .
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