Example sentences of "also p. " in BNC.

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1 This area , according to Freud , is one of concealed desire' ( Fantasy , 8 , 65 ; see also p. 78 ) .
2 Bronski , discussing the romanticizing of the non-Anglo by Edward Carpenter and others , declares : ‘ the English fascination with the non-Anglo — and therefore more ‘ primitive' ’ and ‘ ‘ natural' ’ — cultures … was also based in and inseparable from deeply rooted standards of white British racism and political and cultural imperialism' ( Culture-Clash , 26 — 7 ; see also p. 15 and Bakshi , ‘ Homosexuality and Orientalism ’ ) .
3 The reason was that public confidence in the quality of the coinage depended on the retention of an ‘ immobilised ’ , i.e. unchanging , design ( see also p. 14 and fig. 9 ) .
4 A good example is Augustus , who changed his type of portrait in response to his changing political circumstances ( see also p. 39 ) , and these changes can be approximately dated from coins ( fig. 17 ) .
5 Nero 's adoption of this type of official portrait was an aspect of his revival of the practice of likening the emperor to a god , a practice which had been avoided by the emperors of the previous ninety years ( see also p. 40 ) ; at the same time the choice of this particular model marks a major stage in the growing importance Nero attached to his own theatrical and musical performances which , when given in public , deeply shocked traditional Romans .
6 For instance , a study of the dies used for the bronze coinage of Antoninus Pius ( AD 138–61 ) circulating in Britain has suggested that the total stock of bronze coinage in circulation was of the general magnitude of about ten million sestertii ; as the population of the province was about five million at the time , we can conclude from the low figure of two sestertii per capita that most of the population can not have used coinage on anything like the scale required in a fully monetised society ( see also p. 51 ) .
7 A footpath leaves here on a lonely clifftop walk to Red Point for Gairloch , a magnificent trek with views across to the Outer Hebrides : see also p. 58 .
8 It is invaluable to the sociologist who wishes to trace broad patterns of social change , and to make comparisons between the social conditions of one period and another ( see also p. 100 ) .
9 ( See also p. 124 . )
10 The Bush administration responded by ousting NEA Chairman John Frohnmayer ( see also p. 14 ) .
11 An international edition of the catalogue , with dual language texts in English and Italian , will be published by Fabri several weeks after the exhibition opens ( see also p. 15 ) .
12 Functionally the antennae are organs of special -sense ( Schneider , 1964 ; see also p. 139 ) but in a few cases they are modified for other uses .
13 ( See also p. 67 .
14 ( The move from Aigai to the more central Pella looks forward to hellenistic times : cp. p. 211 ; also p. 48 on the way Sicily too simultaneously shows ‘ archaic ’ and ‘ hellenistic ’ features .
15 These recits are the most interesting of Guedron 's works ; it was he who was responsible for introducing them in place of spoken dialogue , thereby taking the ballet de cour a significant step nearer to opera , particularly in the Ballet de la Délivrance de Renaud ( 1617 ) ( see also p. 322 , n. 44 ) and Ballet du Roy sur L'Adventure de Tancrède en la forest enchantée ( 1619 ) .
16 Hare ( 1973 ) has suggested ( see also p. 111 ) that this is because fluvial processes tend to be dominated by extreme events rather than balance relationships , and that the geomorphic time-scale is very long compared with that appropriate for climatic processes , although glaciology is in a very different situation .
17 ( In recent years the Team Spirit exercise had involved some 200,000 troops and had been vehemently condemned by North Korea as act of unwarranted aggression which impeded channels of communication between the two states — see also p. 36465 . )
18 Whereas this practice was widespread in the UK , it was banned in most other EC member states ; UK observers noted that its abolition in the UK would force UK institutions to double their cash holdings , a factor which they said would raise costs and which could thus jeopardize the dominant position of the London market in European equity trading ( see also p. 36494 ) .
19 It was clear by the end of 1989 that the Commission 's plans to introduce a uniform 15 per cent withholding tax on capital savings had been dropped in the face of vigorous opposition from many member states ( see also p. 36494 ) .
20 The Commission announced on Dec. 12 , 1989 , that it was asking Japan to agree to voluntary restraints on the number of Japanese cars sold , and possibly also constructed , in the EC , for a period of two to three years ( see also p. 35386 ) .
21 Community Environment Ministers voted on June 8 to prolong indefinitely a six-year ban on the import of skins and other products from baby seals , in response to pressure from animal welfare organizations ( see also p. 35959 ) .
22 The section on trade in services reaffirmed the importance of the implementation of consistent and dynamic trade-promotion operations , and provided for further negotiations on more detailed provisions once the outcome of the " Uruguay Round " of GATT multilateral trade negotiations had become known ( see also p. 37227-28 ) .
23 The new convention had been the subject of detailed negotiation over a number of years , with the incompatibility of legislation on advertising in the various countries and the amount of European-made programmes in particular providing obstacles to agreement ( see also p. 36494 ) .
24 The intention to resolve disputes with Libya , notably over the Aouzou strip , although formalized in the agreement on Aug. 31 , 1989 ( see p. 36841 ) , was obstructed by repeated allegations that Libya was supporting anti-regime forces and factions ( although in the wake of that agreement some anti-Habre groups in Tripoli reported that they had been asked to leave ) , and by the Libyan insistence that Chad should return some 2,000 Libyan prisoners of war ( see also p. 37114 ) .
25 Other parties to be legalized ( see also p. 36905 ) were the Parti algerien populaire ( PAP ) , the Union des forces democratiques and the Front national de renouvellement .
26 Talks with the International Monetary Fund ( IMF ) remained deadlocked throughout 1989 by disagreement over the timescale and extent of reforms needed ( see also p. 36435 ) .
27 In March 1989 the USA had voiced its concern that Egypt was developing a chemical weapons plant with Swiss help at the Abu Zaabal military complex north of Cairo , an allegation denied by Egyptian officials ( see also p. 37224 ) .
28 According to the report Egypt had made a " major effort to improve its ability to produce poison gas by acquiring the main elements of a plant from a Swiss company " ( see also p. 37222 ) .
29 However , serious differences continued to present obstacles to an agreement : ( i ) the Soviet Union insisted that not all combat aircraft be included in the treaty , although it made an important concession on this point in September ( see p. 36909 ) ; ( ii ) of the five categories of weapons to be included in a treaty-aircraft , helicopters , tanks , armoured vehicles and artillery ( with troops being the sixth element in an agreement ) -consensus on the definition of the weapons system and the items in that category to be included was only reached on artillery ( see below ) ; ( iii ) the Warsaw Pact insisted on an undertaking by NATO to conduct separate negotiations on the reduction of naval forces ( see Malta summit disagreement on naval forces p. 37111 ) ; and ( iv ) the Warsaw Pact demanded that no modernization of short-range missiles by NATO take place ( see also p. 37227 ) .
30 However , in his annual State of the Union address in Washington on Jan. 31 , 1990 , ( see also p. 37177 ) Bush cited the changes in Eastern Europe as the reason for proposing a new maximum level of 195,000 foreign troops deployed by each superpower in the European " central zone " , with the USA to be permitted an additional 30,000 troops in the UK , Italy and Turkey .
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