Example sentences of "describe [prep] more [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 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 .
3 An information paper ‘ Hygiene Developments ’ , describing in more detail CCG 's response to the Act , was circulated to Operations ' Management to assist them in planning to cope with the onset of the new legislation .
4 The flow can still be described with more emphasis on these systematic features rather than random ones .
5 Baldwin showed them some of the curiosities of the house and gave them tea in the Long Gallery , which lie described with more pride than accuracy as ‘ the finest room in England ’ .
6 Some of the key plants are described in more detail below .
7 Every surveyor develops his own sequence of inspection to ensure that all relevant parts of the property are examined closely and that their inter-relationship is considered ; his system will probably be similar to that described in more detail in Chapter 7 .
8 These channels are described in more detail in specialist publications which also offer helpful suggestions on how and when to use them .
9 Secondly , the weeding process itself is usually based upon three criteria , described in more detail below .
10 ( Individual breeds are described in more detail in their geographical sections . )
11 Since the support worker service was the most innovative and complex part of the project it is described in more detail in the next section .
12 This will be described in more detail in Chapter 3 on bone modifications produced by predators .
13 These have been described in more detail by Ferrari and Ibañez ( 1988 ) , and will be described in Sections 10.5 and 13.3 .
14 The profiles for the approaching waves in both cases have been described in more detail by Hoenselaers and Ernst ( 1990 ) .
15 Most of these are described in more detail elsewhere in this book .
16 This must include recognition of the impact of particular events and circumstances , some of which are now described in more detail .
17 The characters distinguishing this node are both morphological ( described in more detail in Box 3 ) and molecular , for example :
18 In practice it led to the ‘ carve-up ’ ( described in more detail in chapter 6 ) , whereby the four big companies ( five , from 1968 ) were guaranteed national access for agreed amounts of their programmes , with the ITA/IBA controlling certain ‘ quality ’ aspects of content and the proportions of programme types ( news , drama , and so on ) .
19 These notions of the automatisation of processes which no longer require close monitoring are described in more detail in Underwood ( 1982 ) , but for the present purposes it is sufficient to note that attention can only be devoted to higher-level activities , such as comprehension , when lower-level activities have become skilled through practice .
20 The style is less brittle , and characters and incidents are described in more detail .
21 Over the next hundred years a motley collection of military servicemen ( voennosluzhilie lyudi , fur-hunters , merchants , government officials , Orthodox clergymen , fugitive serfs , entrepreneurs and tradesmen ( promyshlenniki ) , convicts , religious dissidents , foreign prisoners-of-war ( generically known as Litva , ‘ Lithuanians ’ ) , cossacks , artisans , adventurers and vagrants ( gulyashchie lyudi ) steadily overwhelmed the indigenous Siberian native population and established a strongly defended network of wooden fortresses , outposts and stockaded population points , several of which swiftly grew from small military and administrative settlements into substantial , bustling frontier towns , a process described in more detail by David Collins in Chapter 2 of this book .
22 As described in more detail in Chapters 5 and 6 , the latter results from the growth in employment in public-sector services in the late 1960s and early 1970s and the search by companies for less cramped factory sites and for cheaper and less unionized labour such as married women ( Fothergill and Gudgin , 1982 ; Massey , 1984 ) .
23 Our third report outlined a number of schemes and initiatives which were intended to further the general aim of closer links with parents and the community : the appointment of a team of home-school liaison assistants ( later redesignated home-school liaison officers ) ; the Portage scheme , described in more detail below ; in-service support courses ; and a wide range of everyday practice , including a great diversity of activities ( forty-seven in all ) which are listed in Table 5.1 .
24 The application of this method to is described in more detail in Chapter 10 .
25 The options are now described in more detail .
26 Data was gathered using variety of observational techniques which are described in more detail in the section 12 .
27 Citation measures will be described in more detail in Chapter 5 .
28 It was apparent that the department felt rather less threatened by the prospect of the appraisal after the process had been described in more detail .
29 The original geological maps , which will be described in more detail below , were prepared only as single-copy manuscripts , making access for researchers outside Edinburgh more difficult , and leading to an unintentional positive discrimination in favour of locally-based students .
30 Citation measures will be described in more detail in Chapter 5 .
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