Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] the [adj] chapter " in BNC.

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1 I demonstrated in the previous chapter that the use of discursive metaphor causes simultaneity and association to replace causality and linear chronology as the compositional principles of the novel , allowing changes of scene in mid-sentence and the coexistence of a number of often incompatible signifieds in a given signifier .
2 for example , for the typical dieter we described in the last chapter , her goals for Week 1 are as follows .
3 As we described in the last chapter , blueprints ( some of which are not available to conscious recall ) weigh heavily among the factors which determine our motives , choices and behaviour .
4 The legal bond can be a useful container while partners struggle to come to terms with the ‘ me in you ’ , the phenomenon we described in the last chapter .
5 Clive and Rose Greenacre , also described in the last chapter , continued to live out their shared problem of fearing abandonment .
6 In England and Wales the position is now governed by the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , section 78 , the terms of which we encountered in the previous chapter .
7 One aspect of health status omitted from the previous chapter on morbidity relates to perceived health status .
8 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , there is a lot more work to be done before the causal process underlying this relationship is laid bare : we do not know whether it is through buying a better diet or better medical care , for example , that richer countries improve their life expectancy .
9 As we shall discuss in the next chapter , this is a question that has concerned pluralists much more .
10 Thus the question , to sharpen up the one we posed in the first chapter , is not : ‘ How can I stop myself getting ‘ like that ’ ? ’ , as if ‘ like that ’ were a chronic condition into which one slowly but permanently sank .
11 Some of this information is summarized in the present chapter , and emphasis is placed here on the sources of the pellet/scat samples and their specific points of interest .
12 The findings , summarized in the final chapter of this report ( Chapter 8 , pp.234–8 ) , are based on data of various kinds obtained from teachers and pupils in the schools associated with the project .
13 A good example , relevant to this book , surfaced in the previous chapter where we discussed ‘ overinclusive thinking ’ as an extreme , clinical , manifestation of divergent thinking .
14 Another convert was Emily Holt ( 1836–93 ) , the historical novelist , whom we mentioned in the preceding chapter .
15 As we mentioned in the first chapter of this book , egalitarian marriage is now widely promoted as an ideal , but recent research indicates that there is a wide gulf between what is said to be happening in terms of sharing in marriage and what actually happens .
16 It was n't until some years later that I came back to the question of the receptors and showed that the most dramatic effects involved the NMDA glutamate receptor I mentioned in the last chapter ( but wo n't discuss further here ) .
17 The first way to do this , as I mentioned in the previous chapter , is to underline the punch with a loud shout .
18 In terms of other help , as I mentioned in the previous chapter , there is the home help service , and there is also meals-on-wheels .
19 As we mentioned in the previous chapter ( Section 7.1 ) spontaneous speech and written language have many important differences .
20 As we will describe in the final chapter , we should plan from strength and not from weakness .
21 These channels make the membrane permeable to ions or molecules , which can then enter the cell and act as signals for the initiation of the biochemical cascades which ultimately lead , in ways that I shall describe in the next chapter , to the synthesis of new synaptic membrane components and hence to synaptic remodelling .
22 At the beginning Dickens piles up adjectives in order to set the scene and build atmosphere as is shown when he writes in the first chapter
23 For convenience , biographies will be included in the present chapter , while catalogues will be treated in the next .
24 Even in this chapter the discussion of The Winter 's Tale had occurred in the first edition much earlier in the book , from where it has been removed and rewritten to be included in the last chapter .
25 Twelve members of the European Community moved towards the standardization of workers ' rights as contained in the Social Chapter of the Maastricht Treaty .
26 As we shall explore in the next chapter , it can be an experience that is both liberating and protecting .
27 His proposed mechanisms we shall explore in the next chapter .
28 One other provision , the Control of Misleading Advertisements Regulations 1988 , will be considered in the present chapter .
29 For reasons outlined earlier in this chapter these do not usually consist of jobs , but rather of space ( which will be considered in the following chapter under the heading of land use and access ) and housing .
30 As in the case of the physical events considered in the last chapter in connection with causation and other nomic connection , mental events strictly speaking are to be regarded as individual properties or sets of such properties .
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