Example sentences of "see in chapter [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This will be seen in chapter 8 , particularly in relation to accessibility to cultural , educational , information and social services , the improvement of which can enhance the quality of life for rural residents .
2 As seen in Chapter Six , both of these schemes cut serious injuries by a half , much more impressive than a reduction of one tenth in all injuries .
3 The concept of the majority is an important one in both British and Irish politics as already seen in Chapter 4 .
4 Instead , at present , as soon as queues develop , the telephone service is the first to be suspended and callers are required to speak to an answering machine , as will be seen in Chapter 4 .
5 They can be gained at the expense of time spent on clients with other problems ( as will be seen in Chapter 4 ) or they can be derived from additional funding earmarked for the purpose .
6 Deaf children are competent learners of language , as we have seen in chapter 4 ; they are cognitively able , and will progress to an effective position in working society .
7 As we have seen in chapter 4 , women 's work is generally less-well-paid than men 's .
8 All this stood town planning well , as we have seen in Chapter 4 , when the early forms of the statutory planning system were established .
9 As will be seen in Chapter four , those who , like Frederick Shaw , try to by-pass the law by publishing a directory or ‘ contact magazine ’ , could be guilty of publishing an obscene article , living off the earnings of prostitution , and conspiring to corrupt public morals .
10 In Yugoslavia , as will be seen in Chapter 10 , there is a wide dispersion of incomes between different regions .
11 We have seen in Chapter 14 that the density variations that drive free convection may be introduced into a fluid through either temperature variations or concentration variations , and that the two are closely analogous .
12 As was seen in Chapter 1 , the main debate here has revolved around how to explain the long waves .
13 As we have already seen in Chapter 1 , the proportion of the temporary labour force who consider themselves self-employed ( 15 per cent ) is rather higher than that of the workforce as a whole ( 11 per cent ) .
14 Indeed , in this latter case a casual and a short-term contract worker are in many ways indistinguishable , since , as we have seen in Chapter 1 , it is only after four weeks employment that a worker is entitled to a minimum period of notice .
15 As we have already seen in chapter 1 for butane and polyethylene , steric repulsions impose restrictions to bond rotation .
16 As already seen in Chapter 1 , possession and ownership in English law are normally " exclusive " , that is , they involve " Keep off ! " actions and attitudes towards the property and towards other people .
17 Many of these processes can be identified as secondary loss peaks in dynamic mechanical , or dielectric measurements , as will be seen in chapter 13 .
18 As will be seen in Chapter 5 , understanding this religious social consciousness requires some grasp of the traditional catholic teaching on the natural order and the good society , and how the nation is to respect the divine order established by God .
19 As will be seen in Chapter 5 , this interpretation is not without foundation .
20 For metal objects , as we have seen in Chapter 5 , the bulk composition was very much under the control of the metalsmith rather than being unique to origin .
21 Furthermore it might have been thought that the compact microfilm system would have found its way from outreach extensions into busy bureaux to replace the cumbersome paper files but , as will be seen in Chapter 5 , it is in fact likely to remain purely a portable tool .
22 It will be seen in Chapter 5 that city bureaux also make links with local libraries , but in the main they are arranging to share local information rather than develop the self-service information service as in the rural communities .
23 As was seen in Chapter 5 the form of a graded river approaches a concave curve as a rule , though it may depart from it under certain circumstances .
24 It leads to the Raman effect , which , as we have already seen in Chapter 5 , is many orders of magnitude less efficient than direct resonant absorption .
25 As will be seen in Chapter 7 , this itself could only have been due to current Roman catholic social teaching on mixed marriage .
26 Observation posts were established by UNCOK and important reports were to be forwarded in June 1950 , as will be seen in chapter 7 .
27 Some advocates of corporate social responsibility ( the term is deeply ambiguous , as will be seen in Chapter 9 ) maintain that companies should allow their decisions to be influenced not only by profit , but also by social policy factors .
28 As seen in Chapter 3 , this was also true in the nineteenth century , despite lower clergy support particularly for the Fenian movement .
29 However , as we have seen in Chapter 3 , clinical aromatherapy ( without the use of massage ) can work wonders if applied in a holistic rather than a symptomatic way .
30 A talk to probation officers will indirectly reach a section of the community — prisoners — who are not able to come to a bureau and may be seriously in need of a bureau 's services , as was seen in Chapter 3 .
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