Example sentences of "in this book [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 If proofs there are in this book they are only that Marxism is now quite properly the preserve of cranks and dreamers .
2 The physical implementation and application areas of microcomputers are thus different from mainstream computers , but at the instruction set level which we discuss in this book they can be treated as variations on the central Von Neumann model .
3 In this book they will be firmly treated as biological objects .
4 Now in this book they will read that the progressive forces of the late eighteen hundreds and the early nineteen hundreds will endeavour to educate the workers from the er , mythological and textile industries were not basically communists .
5 For the first time in this book we shall take a closer look at one branch of the proletariat .
6 In this book we have spoken of life as a series of dialogues : between carbon and water ; between proteins and nucleic acids ; between competition and co-operation .
7 So far in this book we have emphasized the need for social research to be based on scientific method .
8 The two tasks are interrelated but in this book we separate them and look in this chapter at the first and most difficult task .
9 In this book we have tried to bring together practitioners from different fields as well as from four different academic disciplines .
10 In this book we are dealing with the second function ; application forms as a means of making an initial selection .
11 In this book we focus solely on a third set of questions : What impact is the new technology having on people at work ?
12 While that remains a central concern , in this book we have broadened our concern to include murders where there is a clear sexual element , and some other forms of sexual assault and crime .
13 We hope that by employing non-discriminatory usage in this book we have shown that it is possible and easy to adopt another style .
14 Furthermore the term register is sometimes used to refer to any device which holds a group of one or more bits of information , and which is capable of being accessed at electronic speeds : in this book we use it only for storage devices provided for some special purpose ( such as the SAR ) , and do not apply it to a general store location .
15 In this book we are concerned with those internal design aspects of a computer which directly affect the way in which it processes data ; we therefore exclude such external aspects as the packaging of electronic components and units , the supply of power , or the conditions under which the computer is capable of operating , important though these are .
16 In this book we will be looking at the level at which facilities are provided in electronic hardware , as they might be seen by a system programmer about to implement the most basic software on the computer .
17 In this book we will be using verbal , informal descriptions rather than such a formal language for two reasons ; ( a ) these languages define more detail than we usually wish to consider ; and ( b ) they describe complete computers , whereas we wish to look at any stage at a particular aspect of a number of computers .
18 In this book we have insufficient space to be able to do justice to Boole 's ideas by indicating applications to logic , probability and computer design .
19 In this book we have chosen to distinguish three contexts in which evaluation procedures operate .
20 Sparta did not abandon her aims in Thessaly ; in 426 the Spartans founded a colony at Herakleia in Trachis , which commanded the Thessalian border ( p. 131 ) ; and later in this book we shall follow this thread of Spartan policy further still ( see p. 153 and chapter 14 , p. 186 ) .
21 In this book we will be using the ‘ C-word ’ in these senses to refer to the present penal situation in England and Wales , albeit with slight embarrassment and the worry that it has been used so often and for so long that there is a danger that it may be losing its dramatic impact .
22 So far in this book we have considered social change in rural England almost entirely in terms of agriculture .
23 So far in this book we have attempted to deal with some of the basic ‘ building blocks ’ of language : its lexical stock and grammatical structures .
24 In this book we have tried to indicate the ways in which a law and order policy informed by a conservative criminology emerged before and since Mrs Thatcher came to power in Britain in 1979 .
25 In this book we will be discussing mainly features which are easily seen in the landscape , from deserted villages to fields and churches .
26 In this book we shall use ASE nomenclature , although for many substances this will be the same as the IUPAC nomenclature .
27 In this book we will look at the kinds of things you have to do to respond to each type of question .
28 In this book we shall assume , for working purposes , that a semantic theory is truth-conditional .
29 For the conditions described in this book it is the selection of the remedy that is of far greater importance than the specific potency used .
30 If you follow the guidelines given in this book it can only help and certainly will not harm .
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