Example sentences of "have [verb] in chapter " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I have referred in chapter 2 to the need for a language policy across the curriculum ; a recommendation to this effect appeared in both the Bullock and the Swann Reports .
2 These scholars tended — seemingly without giving much thought to the matter — to accept the standard ideology and the doctrine of uniformity that is associated with it ; indeed , as we have noticed in chapter 3 , they were also influenced by ideological positions which they believed to be ‘ common sense ’ .
3 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 .
4 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 .
5 Marx used a numerical model of simple reproduction , which we have seen in Chapter 3 , and suggested that Dept .
6 This is what masonry is about and as we have seen in Chapter 2 , starting with the simple wall one can go from the arch to the dome and to the most complicated cathedral , keeping everything in compression , or at least trying to do so .
7 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 .
8 As we have seen in chapter 4 , women 's work is generally less-well-paid than men 's .
9 As we have seen in Chapter I , most employment law rights are available only to people having a minimum of four weeks ' service , whilst protection against unfair dismissal for other than trade union activities , even with the law at its most liberal , required six months ' service .
10 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 .
11 Cain ( 1985 ) argues that it is the unreliability of marriage , no longer , as we have seen in chapter 3 , a contract of total sanctity , which constitutes the economic case for policy interventions to help women in the labour force .
12 As we have seen in Chapter 3 marginal farmers engaged in sheep and beef cattle rearing dominate the upland areas , and many of them are on a ‘ deferred death sentence ’ .
13 All this stood town planning well , as we have seen in Chapter 4 , when the early forms of the statutory planning system were established .
14 There are grounds for suggesting that the market test can produce perverse incentives , as we have seen in Chapter 3 .
15 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 .
16 If , furthermore , animals lack self-consciousness , as I have argued in Chapter 6 , then no sense can be given ( a far stronger claim than that we do not know ) to the contention that they are aware of the prospect of death and terrified at its implications .
17 We have argued in Chapter 1 that computer databases offer advantages in storing and presenting the data over manual or computer file-based systems .
18 Secondly , as we have shown in Chapter 2 , there are consistent , significant , positive correlations between the rates of known opioid use on Wirral and the six major indicators of social deprivation : unemployment , council tenancies , overcrowding , large families , unskilled labour force , and presence of single parents .
19 For example , meteorological in the phrase meteorological expert can be , and will be , restrictive but , as we have shown in Chapter 2 , it is not to be ascribed to the entity of its head noun ; quite generally , there is not the least problem about using an associative adjective restrictively .
20 Intangible economic benefits : A large proportion of CMEA imports may have no suitable or readily equivalent Western substitute : the CMEA product mix is geared to the requirements of Soviet industry which , as we have noted in Chapter 2 , may differ from those in the West ; and Western equipment may require complementary products or particular production methods which can be introduced into the Soviet environment only at some effort and expense .
21 We have noted in Chapter 2 that politicians bring values , policies and priorities to the process and these will , of course , influence the process .
22 His inability to grasp the intricacies of modern economics was due in large measure to limits of intellect and lack of appropriate training ( although , as we have noted in Chapter 5 , this did not prevent him from drafting , in 1939 , his " National Programme for Resurgence " ) .
23 Indeed , as we have noted in chapter 2 , librarians are amongst its biggest users .
24 We have indicated in Chapter 3 how the search for the sex fiend is a source of considerable news coverage .
25 There is much evidence to suggest ( as we have indicated in Chapter 8 on education ) that considerable potential talent is wasted , and that it is the stratification system itself which restricts the development of potentially talented members of society from the lower orders .
26 For humans , as we have discussed in Chapter 1 , the body has been ‘ waking us up ’ since about 5 o'clock in the morning so that , by the time we normally wake , we are prepared for the rigours of a new day ; in the evening our body begins to ‘ tone us down ’ to prepare us for getting to sleep .
27 In the meantime , the colleges themselves are trying very hard to develop high-level courses , partly for the reasons of ‘ academic drift ’ we have discussed in Chapter 5 , and are supported in this endeavour by the LEAs , who regard them as their prestige institutions , and by the WJEC .
28 Their answer is roughly as I have outlined in Chapter 1 .
29 These are , first ( as I have mentioned in chapter 1 ) , a tendency to focus on patterns of change alone with little or no attention to stable patterns of language through time ; second , a tendency to unidimensionality , that is , an inclination to think of the history of a language as the history of a single homogeneous variety and of sound-changes as proceeding in straight lines ; and third , as noted in chapter 2 , a tendency to impose theoretical and ideological orthodoxies on ( sometimes rather sparse ) data that might often be open to alternative kinds of interpretation .
30 Indeed as I have suggested in Chapter 1 , it can be seen as the business of applied linguistics to do just this .
  Next page