Example sentences of "see in this chapter " in BNC.

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1 It can be seen in this chapter that Green has given clear directions from where the picture should be painted .
2 We have seen in this chapter that little has been achieved in British residential areas in terms of safer and more attractive environments .
3 We have seen in this chapter how a dual structure of production has been maintained in Japan through the interconnected activities of private business and a state which has supported the simultaneous existence of a limited number of larger companies and a massive network of smaller ones .
4 As will be seen in this chapter , the context of argumentation can be more complex than this : there can be arguments within arguments .
5 As we have seen in this chapter , however , the newcomers , no matter how monolithic and undifferentiated they may seem to the locals , are composed of a number of identifiably separate urban middle-class groups — commuters , weekend cottagers , holiday-home dwellers , retired couples — among whom the village may vary considerably as a centre of their social activities .
6 That assumption , as we have seen in this chapter , is illegitimate .
7 We have seen in this chapter how wrong that is .
8 We have seen in this chapter how , in less than half a century , man 's view of the universe , formed over millennia , has been transformed .
9 As already seen in this chapter , such perfection is not to be expected and the probability of the additional information being accurate must be taken into account .
10 As already seen in this chapter , such perfection is not to be expected and the probability of the additional information being accurate must be taken into account .
11 We have seen in this chapter that , according to the neo-classical theory , flexible wages and prices ensure that the labour market is in equilibrium — in other words , full employment is assured in the long-run .
12 However , as we will see in this chapter , it is possible to carry out systematic studies of production ; and the results of such studies have an essential contribution to make to our understanding of language processing .
13 We saw in this chapter that the rich are more inclined to say that they would break an unjust law than the poor .
14 As we saw in this chapter , more recently it has been found that this account of processing can not be correct for at least three reasons : ( a ) there is evidence that syntactic and semantic processing is not delayed until the end of the clause ; ( b ) there is evidence that information about the specific wording is retained after the end of a clause if that clause contains nonspecific words which subsequent clauses will disambiguate ; ( c ) specific wording will also be retained if it has pragmatic significance .
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