Example sentences of "[prep] this section [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 The six-month assessment will at least allow you to learn from your mistakes by pinpointing which of the pitfalls mentioned during this section you may have fallen into .
2 In the rest of this section we will show , by example , how PGPs may be solved by slightly modifying the simplex method We will start with problem P2 in which we write ‘ Gmax ’ to signal a PGP and list the objectives in order of priority ( highest first ) .
3 In the remainder of this section we will examine the following issues : which bodies are subject to judicial review ; what sorts of decision are subject to judicial review ; who can apply to have a decision judicially reviewed ; what remedies are available to an applicant for judicial review ; and the procedures for seeking judicial review .
4 For the remainder of this section we shall develop the distinction between service industries and service occupations as it provides a useful starting-point to consider some of the major post-war trends in service employment .
5 But for the rest of this section we will try to explain how the sentencing decisions of the two levels of court contribute to the crisis .
6 In the remainder of this section we shall compare the use made of the network variable in three very different studies .
7 At the beginning of this section we made the distinction between ‘ spontaneous ’ and ‘ induced ’ flows of funds between the government and the private sector .
8 In the remainder of this section we shall look at what this means and just how true it is .
9 So for the rest of this section we can ignore processes in which the ion is excited , either immediately or during the ejection of the electron .
10 For the remainder of this section we will look at the problems associated with such intervention .
11 If I have any criticisms of this section it is that it underestimates the difficulties of writing software and ignores the influence the historical development of computing has on the acceptance of new ideas ( what Seymour Papert calls the QWERTY phenomenon ) .
12 ( 4 ) Notwithstanding anything in the foregoing provisions of this section it shall be competent for a licensing board to entertain objections from the chief constable , lodged at any time before the hearing of an application , if the board is satisfied that there is sufficient reason why due notice and intimation of the objection could not be given , and in such a case the chief constable shall cause his objections to be intimated to the applicant before the hearing .
13 At the start of this section it was stated that packages form the basis of software control in LIFESPAN .
14 Before deriving the results of this section it is necessary to state clearly a number of underlying assumptions .
15 As I mention in my letter , a footway along this section it could help to avoid accidents and even save lives .
16 ‘ ( 4 ) In proceedings for an offence under this section it is a defence for the accused to prove that he was inside a dwelling and had no reason to believe that the words or behaviour used , or the written material displayed , would be heard or seen by a person outside that or any other dwelling . ’
17 ‘ In proceedings for an offence under this section it is a defence for an accused who is not shown to have intended to stir up racial hatred to prove that he was not aware of the content of the material and did not suspect , and had no reason to suspect , that it was threatening , abusive or insulting . ’
18 Under this section he may be ordered by the licensing board to make alterations , and failure to comply with such an order is an offence .
19 So far in this section we have looked at the present provision of training and at ways of improving the system .
20 Accordingly , in this section we shall expand the three levels of prevention to four , that is , primary , secondary , tertiary , and quaternary .
21 In this section we examine the clash of interests which soil erosion brings about , and we ask whose interests they are and how they are pursued in the face of conflict .
22 In this section we shall consider d , the difference in proportions ( Davis 1976 ) .
23 In this section we have concentrated on one type of white-collar crime , corporate crime .
24 In this section we will concentrate on region II , and put .
25 In this section we will consider techniques for solving these problems and , in passing , illustrate how dual simplex iterations may be carried out using compact tableaux .
26 In this section we will assume that p objective functions are arranged in decreasing order of priority .
27 In this section we will describe some ways in which the choices involved in applying the B & B method may be resolved .
28 In this section we will offer some suggestions , all of which have proved valuable in practice , intended to render more efficient the implementation of the B & B method on large ILPs and , especially , large MILPs .
29 In this section we continue the story from the point reached in the ‘ Politics ’ section in Chapter 1 — the year 1815 and the illusion of the eighteenth century restored to Europe .
30 In this section we shall look at some scientific mysteries that are rather more profound than the skin-colours of dinosaurs or prehistoric human beings .
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