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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 These issues are discussed in Chapter 2 in relation to the clauses in the precedent s in that chapter which are affected by this issue .
2 I 'm gon na read from verse thirty five , just the paragraph there , the last paragraph in that chapter it says on that day when evening had come Jesus said to them let us go over to the other side and leaving the multitude they took him along with them just as he was in the boat and other boats were with them .
3 And over in the last verse in that chapter it says , he who believes in the son , has eternal life but he who does not obey the son , shall not see life , but the wrath of God abides on him .
4 In that chapter I treated the habituation experiment as a form of recognition memory task in which subjects compare current sensory input with representations of previous inputs .
5 In this chapter we have looked at influences on public perceptions of politics , not at influences upon attitudes .
6 In this chapter we are able to witness a typical day in its life .
7 In this chapter we shall be discussing two main forms of physical violation : the use of physical force , and sexual assaults .
8 In this chapter we shall be looking at how this particular group of people might view and understand what is being offered to them by the church at the time of a major bereavement .
9 In this chapter we will concentrate on looking at reactions to and of dying children , and also at old people and their reaction to death .
10 In this chapter we have argued that emotion in drama is real , but that it is nevertheless a modified version of that same emotion felt in an actual event , for the emotional response in drama is a response to an abstraction .
11 In this chapter we discuss yet another dialogue , between the various forms of energy — radiations — that bombard the Earth from space , and the gases of the atmosphere that envelop the Earth .
12 In this chapter we examine this idea more closely .
13 In this chapter we will examine various explanations of why most soil conservation policies do not work .
14 In this chapter we are concerned with key aspects of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , an Act based to some extent on the report of a Royal Commission under the chairmanship of Sir Cyril Philips .
15 Earlier in this chapter we described the rate of referral of cases to the development officers , and Table 3. 1 shows the size of their case load month by month .
16 In this chapter we shall look at ways of smoothing the edges off the jagged initial appearance of data plotted over time ; we shall look at the observations three at a time , taking seriously the spirit of this somewhat sarcastic remark , to get indications of the trend .
17 In this chapter we shall investigate the answers to some of these questions in an example drawn from a debate about health policy .
18 In this chapter we have looked at the extent to which chronic sickness rates as reported on the GHS are predictable from death rates .
19 In this chapter we shall first take a look at how the most commonly used measure of national wealth — gross national product ( GNP ) — is constructed , and consider the distribution of GNP across several countries .
20 In this chapter we have looked at specific aspects and illustrations of crime and the study of it .
21 In this chapter we will examine what these statistics show and discuss the extent to which they provide an accurate picture of the range and extent of criminal behaviour .
22 In this chapter we concentrate on the problem of integrating geographical data reported for different areal spatial units , one of the most intractable of all data integration problems .
23 In this chapter we will present an analysis of the colliding wave problem using a method that has become familiar in the study of stationary axisymmetric space-times .
24 In this chapter we will consider only vacuum solutions .
25 In this chapter we have reviewed some types of learning and the conditions necessary to promote them .
26 Later in this chapter we will examine the gradual growth of government concern to assume a closer control of the process .
27 In this chapter we have concentrated on two major life choices , the choice of marriage partner and , more briefly , whether to parent or not .
28 In this chapter we shall be considering some of these ‘ natural ’ shocks to the system of marriage and asking why they upset some people and are the making of others .
29 In this chapter we outline some of the transitions which normally take place in the course of married life and the challenges they pose .
30 In this chapter we consider briefly the scope of the single market and how its development and future evolution provide threats , challenges and opportunities for growth for all businesses , large and small alike .
  Next page