Example sentences of "in [noun] [adj] where [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The larger the sample the more closely will its average agree with the population average , as seen in Figure 7.6 where the population average is represented by the central zero .
2 The larger the sample the more closely will its average agree with the population average , as seen in Figure 7.6 where the population average is represented by the central zero .
3 Consider the case depicted in Figure 5.9 where the economy starts in a position of full employment at point A. Suppose the level of aggregate demand were suddenly to fall , for example as a result of a decline in planned investment .
4 This will be looked at in Chapter 7 where a number of commercial DBMS are investigated .
5 There is a substantial overlap here with the fiduciary controls and so this issue will be considered below , and in more detail in Chapter 9 where the extent to which the legal rules are tolerant of expenditure for ‘ socially responsible ’ purposes will be examined .
6 Finally , let us rekindle that vision in Isaiah 11 where the lion does not eat the lamb but lies down in a symbiotic relationship with it .
7 An example of the output is shown in Plate 2 where an image of As , Sb and Bi in stream sediments , which are associated with gold mineralisation , indicates anomalous values over several gold prospects in the Argyll area of western Scotland .
8 Nonetheless , I felt it necessary to invoke the paragraph in relation to the Spanish report on the Dan Air 727 which crashed at Tenerife in April 1980 where an attachment by the UK accredited representative constitutes an integral part of the official report on the accident .
9 This is illustrated in Fig. 5 where the increase in the money supply is shown by the shift from M 1 s to M 2 s .
10 This is shown in Fig. 4.7 where the money supply falls from MS to MS′ and the interest rate rises from r e to r′ e in graph ( i ) .
11 This is shown in Fig. 4 where the increase in the money supply from M 2 s to M 3 s leaves the interest rate unchanged at Oi 2 .
12 That the original Phillips curve did break down in the late 1960s is clearly illustrated in Fig. 6.3 where the curve estimated by Phillips is shown together with the observed combination of the unemployment percentage and the rate of wage inflation from 1966 to 1985 .
13 This is shown in Fig. 2.7 where the equilibrium real wage is ( W/P ) 1 and equilibrium employment is OL 1 .
14 This is illustrated in Fig. 2.6 where the equilibrium real wage is ( W/P ) 1 and equilibrium employment is OL 1 .
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