Example sentences of "[vb infin] [prep] more detail " in BNC.

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1 This is of course traumatic in itself and involves an interview with the Registrar which we will discuss in more detail in chapter 11 .
2 The first part of this chapter will discuss in more detail the three main problems of lexical access that were outlined in sections 2 and 3 of Chapter 2 .
3 Systems will simply not change as easily as Shapland and Hobbs seem to hope ; for police society is extremely conservative and masculine in outlook , and has long reflected the low esteem women are given in wider society , as I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4 .
4 In Britain , this used fuel with its lethal inventory is either carefully stored or sent for ‘ reprocessing ’ at the Sellafield plant in Cumbria , a procedure I shall describe in more detail later .
5 In order to formulate our simple model , we must first consider in more detail the link between the rate of price inflation and the rate of money wage inflation .
6 In this chapter I shall consider in more detail what is involved in this task , how context acts upon grammar so that the specific meanings of particular expressions are realized and communicative outcomes brought about .
7 Having dealt at length with the management and , to a limited extent , with the financing of public sector higher education , we shall now consider in more detail the ‘ pooling ’ arrangements that have obtained in recent years and the likely criteria upon which NAB 's financial decisions will be based .
8 Now we must consider in more detail some of the ways we may use vibrational spectra to give structural information about inorganic substances .
9 That , in itself , is an argument for the establishment of a Select Committee on Scottish affairs , which could consider in more detail an education system that we all value highly .
10 So in return we shall specify in more detail what we expect from you .
11 Let us look in more detail at the difficulties inherent for everyone in appropriate penetration and then at the problems that can arise in marriage when these are or an extreme nature .
12 Now let us look in more detail at switches 1 to 4 .
13 The question of payments to councillors will be considered below , but first we shall look in more detail at the results of the three surveys .
14 In the rest of this chapter , we will look in more detail at the diversity of family life in Britain and at some of the factors that affect it .
15 In the next section , we shall look in more detail at what students mean by ‘ physics ’ .
16 With these two levels of culture within higher education having been distinguished , let us look in more detail at them .
17 Let us look in more detail at the direct vs indirect argument , first in relation to incentives to work and second in relation to incentives to save and take risks .
18 We shall look in more detail at the Financial Services Act 1986 in Chapter 9 .
19 To show diversity , the team will also look in more detail at a number of small geographic areas .
20 If we take one of the quotes in Fig. 8.1 as illustrative we may look in more detail at the information which is published :
21 We have already considered how DVI works in our section on video compression ( see 3.10 ) and we will look in more detail at its practical implications below in 3.23 .
22 Let us look in more detail at the intermediate stages of the sequence .
23 As we shall see in more detail in the next chapter , there are many features of such conditions that make them quite obviously inimical to the creative act .
24 The law recognises that the shareholders ' interest lies ultimately in the value of their shares and not in the business as such , or at least , it recognises that it should be the shareholders who determine the outcome of a bid , and hence ( as we will see in more detail in Chapter 5 ) prohibits certain forms of defensive action on the part of the target company board which could have the effect of depriving the members of an opportunity to dispose of their investment on favourable terms .
25 However , we have already pointed out , by implication , one very important syntactic consequence : only the ascriptive adjectives are eligible to appear predicatively , that is , in a position like that of hungry in : ( 19 ) the antelopes are hungry As was already indicated in Chapter 1 , and as we shall see in more detail in Chapter 3 , predicative position is the surface structure which expresses the intensional relation of assignment , and assignment does require that the property of the adjective should be construed as applied to the entity of the subject noun phrase .
26 I commend that exercise to you but wo n't go into more detail about it now .
27 Yes I wanted to erm outline what the you know the purpose of these discussions today er so that we can get to the point where we can get into er get into more detail .
28 The phrase ‘ can be followed by ’ indicates that not all crime does actually result in police action and prosecution , an issue we will examine in more detail in a discussion of criminal statistics ( Chapter 4 ) .
29 As we will examine in more detail in Chapter 10 , the mass media can in a very important sense direct the way we look at the world and the questions we ask about it .
30 The next section will examine in more detail what is meant by ‘ corporate power ’ , and the different areas in which it has an impact .
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