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

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1 As we saw in section 10.5 , we are looking for a line which will make the residual Y s as small as possible .
2 As we saw in section 5.2 , recent changes in the nature of local politics may well have made the ideal-type of the dual state no longer applicable .
3 We saw in Section 8.1 that the coefficient of in the equation of the canonical form in which x i j is basic is , where for reverse and for forward variables .
4 The optimal tableau of the LP relaxation of P1 is , as we saw in Section 11.2 , given in P1*/LP0 , with the a 3 -row omitted .
5 We saw in Section II that shape-perception is not needed for the recognition of object-identity , so that if we were to attribute identity-perception to a creature ( perhaps because of its ability to follow a moving target ) we would not thereby be justified in attributing shape-perception also .
6 As we saw in Section 5.3 particularly , the establishment of a genuinely across-the-curriculum study skills programme is one possibility , and further infrastructural changes were also often considered in the wake of the project .
7 As we saw in section 2.3 the processes of decentralization took place not only from central regions to the regions of the north and west , but also within regions from large towns and conurbations to small towns and more rural areas .
8 As we saw in section 2.5 , the sectoral spatial division of labour was already beginning to break down in the UK during the post-war years when Fordism is supposed to have been at its height .
9 As we saw in section III , in the US and EC jurisdictions price discrimination is more or less per se illegal : resale price maintenance is also per se illegal in all jurisdictions , though it is difficult to justify separating out RPM from other vertical restraints on the basis of economic analysis .
10 As we saw in section 4.1.1 , building societies benefited in 1983 by being allowed to bid for wholesale deposits in order to maintain their share of the mortgage market and benefited further by the liberalising Building Society Act in 1986 .
11 At the same time , and as we saw in section 5.1 , the regulations increased the range and number of bills which institutions could offer for discount at the Bank by recognising as ‘ eligible ’ bills commercial bills accepted by certain leading banks .
12 This ‘ maturity matching ’ reduces risk ( as we saw in section 1.1.4 ) and therefore the need for low- or zero-yielding reserves .
13 But as we saw in Section 1.3 there are limitations to the approach .
14 We saw in section 3.2 that phosphorus has three forms .
15 From Raoult 's law by substituting these equations into equation ( 1 ) , we obtain We saw in section 4.1 that where m is the mass in grams and M is the molar mass in grams per mole .
16 Along plate margins the horizontal motion of plates is the primary force driving the uplift which occurs in orogens ( although as we saw in Section 3.3 vertical movement resulting from thermal effects is of great importance in continental-margin orogens ) .
17 We saw in Section 2.6 that the production of turbulent slugs can be either random or periodic in time , as illustrated by the oscillograms of Fig. 2.10 .
18 As we saw in section 2.1 , we can not state the truth conditions of sentences with indexicals without reference to the deictic function of indexicals ; but if we allow truth conditions to be relativized to speakers , addressees , times , places , indicated objects , etc. , then it looks as if many aspects of deixis can be accommodated within truth-conditional semantics .
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