Example sentences of "chapter [num] and [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | In Chapter 2 and subsequently , I have stressed the enormous variations in context which exist in African schools , between countries , between urban and rural conditions , between and within individual schools , and the way that these various elements so critically affect the learning experiences a school offers . |
2 | Other examples from his list of claimed sense-qualifiers turn out to belong , instead , to a class of peculiarly restrictive adjectives which we discuss elsewhere ( Chapter 7 and also Ferris , in preparation ) : ( 31 ) their main faults our prime suspect he was named first citizen These adjectives , unlike most , are inherently restrictive , and select the particular entity to be identified by a speaker out of an already assumed body of entities ; thus the faults in the first example are not main faults in any general sense , as would be required if they were to be sense-qualifiers ; they are those that come out in front , relative to the background group of all their faults , relevant on the particular occasion where the expression is used . |
3 | The woman who wept over the feet of Jesus in Luke chapter 7 and then proceeded to wipe his feet with her hair and anoint them with ointment , had her sins forgiven . |
4 | See chapter 4 and also the extract which follows . |
5 | Such actions may be perceived as regulation or deregulation and may have economic effects ( as will be discussed in chapter 4 and elsewhere ) , but they may essentially be a response to special interests or to fashions in ideas . |
6 | Porter refers to his basic value-chain analysis , which was briefly described in chapter 4 and now needs closer examination . |
7 | Furthermore , it is likely that the allophonic distribution of these sounds in EModE was quite different from the RP distribution today , and that the doctrine of ( retrospective ) phonemic purity ( as displayed in the remark about man and men ) is therefore inappropriate ( supporting examples from the Belfast projects are cited in chapter 4.6 and below ) . |
8 | We discussed Maslow 's theory in Chapter 5 and so we do not need to reproduce his basic arguments . |
9 | Such an order has inheritance tax advantages ( if dissolution of the marriage has taken place ) , a saving in the HM Land Registry fees is available ( see Chapter 3 and generally ) and , as any financial provision can be expressed in the order to be in full and final settlement of the wife 's claims ( see Chapter 11 ) , it is less likely to be upset than an agreement between the parties not carried into a " consent order " ( see for instance Dinch v Dinch [ 1987 ] 1 WLR 252 where the court refused to make a further order on the grounds that the consent order had conclusively determined the rights of the parties in the matrimonial home ) . |
10 | Thus , extracts related to Chapter 2 precede those related to Chapter 3 and so on , although certain studies are of course relevant to more than one particular aspect of the sociology of crime . |
11 | The relational model was described in Chapter 3 and therefore it is not proposed to repeat this description here . |
12 | Adjusting bias will be discussed in Chapter 6 and again in Chapter 8 . |
13 | As we shall see , this not only involves detailed statutory measures prohibiting insider dealing ( these are outlined in the following chapter ) , but also the effective implementation of other institutional arrangements such as Chinese Walls ( discussed in Chapter Five and thereafter ) to block the flow of price sensitive information within financial conglomerates . |
14 | In this state the polymer exhibits several unique properties which are dealt with in chapter 14 and only a brief description of the chain behaviour in this region is given here . |