Example sentences of "[pers pn] see in chapter " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But when it comes to the varieties of anthropology I get fussy , as you saw in Chapter l .
2 We saw in Chapters 4 and 5 just how effective both the coordinating committee and the schools ' library committees could be as bodies which handled the nuts and bolts of the project and converted aims and objectives into a reality .
3 As we saw in chapters 6 and 7 , for pluralists the activities of groups are the central feature of the political process .
4 But as we saw in Chapters 5 and 6 there may be very many extraneous word strings which are homophonous with the correct words , and which extend some if not all of the way through the utterance .
5 As we saw in Chapter 14 , Michel Foucault argues that before the nineteenth century the sodomite was someone who performed a certain kind of act ; no specific identity was attributed to , or assumed by , the sodomite .
6 As we saw in Chapter 4 , the London Evening News accused him of trying to subvert the ‘ wholesome , manly , simple ideals of English life ’ , and connected his sexual perversion with intellectual and moral subversion .
7 We saw in Chapter 7 how the enemy is ‘ homosexualized ’ , with the result that , even while homosexuals were being imprisoned and murdered by the Nazis , it could be said that to eliminate homosexuality would be to get rid of fascism .
8 As we saw in Chapter 9 , Augustine gives a memorable earlier version of the Cartesian cogito : ‘ Si enim fallor sum ’ — if I am deceived , then I exist .
9 Gassendi begins by addressing a question first raised by the Greek sceptics , as we saw in Chapter 1 .
10 The interaction between these elements is a complex one , as we saw in Chapter 6.5 .
11 Insanity was , and still is , a complete defence to crime , as we saw in Chapter 6.2 above , but its confines are narrow , and some persons obviously suffering from mental disorder came to be sentenced to death for murder before 1957 .
12 Another problem is the more general one of liability for negligence : as we saw in Chapter 5.3 ( f ) , this is regarded as insufficient for liability for most serious offences , and yet it may be sufficient for manslaughter .
13 As we saw in Chapter 2 , water has a very high specific heat , which means it takes a lot of heat to change the temperature of the sea significantly ; and in cold conditions , the oceans are slow to cool off .
14 Yet we saw in Chapter 1 that plants are the source of almost all life on Earth ; they alone can create the organic molecules which the animals consume .
15 As we saw in chapter ten , the beatitudes of Jesus express the radicalism of living under the rule of God 's own character .
16 But , as we saw in Chapter 5 , genetic evolution too may proceed as a series of brief spurts between stable plateaux .
17 In the case of genes , we saw in Chapter 3 that co-adapted gene complexes may arise in the gene pool .
18 We saw in Chapter 3 that the law now offers you some protection if there is a ‘ transfer of undertaking ’ , although not if there is a mere sale of shareholding control .
19 As we saw in Chapter 4 , your contract may cater for a wide variety of perks , such as :
20 We saw in Chapter 6 that fixed-term contracts offer one , strictly limited , means of contracting out of statutory rights .
21 As we saw in Chapter 5 , your freedom to move elsewhere may be limited in a number of ways .
22 As we saw in chapter 3 , logs convert multiplicative processes into additive ones , since log ( ab ) = log ( a ) + log ( b ) .
23 As we saw in chapter 8 , a logistic transformation can help straighten out a flat S-shaped curve ( figure 8.5 ) .
24 Although incomes in the 1980s were substantially higher in real terms than they were at the end of the 1950s , there has been no sustained decrease in inequality ; in fact , as we saw in chapter 5 ( figure 5.5 ) , income inequality in Britain increased sharply after 1976 .
25 As we saw in chapter 12 , there is another quite different intellectual reason for wanting to control for a third factor when assessing the relationship between two variables .
26 As we saw in Chapter 2 , such prices are sometimes referred to as ‘ cost-plus ’ prices .
27 As we saw in Chapter 4 the stress concentration at the tip of a crack is about : Now in many materials , R , the tip radius of the crack , remains constant whatever the crack length , so that as the crack gets longer , the stress concentration gets worse .
28 The trouble is , as we saw in Chapter 2 , that time is the one resource par excellence that teachers feel short of .
29 But the laxity with which he argues for its deployment , as we saw in Chapter 3 , gives inherent value a defiantly marshmallow consistency .
30 Animals obey orders , the guard-dog does its duty , but as we saw in Chapter 5 , such attributions involve a language-game only reminiscent of the human paradigm .
  Next page