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

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1 for example , for the typical dieter we described in the last chapter , her goals for Week 1 are as follows .
2 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 .
3 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 .
4 Clive and Rose Greenacre , also described in the last chapter , continued to live out their shared problem of fearing abandonment .
5 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 ) .
6 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 .
7 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 .
8 The distinction between grammar and lexis which we used in the last chapter cuts across this distinction between levels .
9 A story in Numbers 25 which we did not consider in the last chapter ( for it is not a complaint story ) makes it even more readily understandable .
10 Why , as urban sociologists such as those we reviewed in the last chapter argued , should a spatial or urban sociology not also be concerned with the class relations of production ?
11 Since it is largely new , it might be appropriate to concentrate on the last chapter which " offers a reading of some very different Shakespearean plays " ( p. 196 ) .
12 You may wonder how this rather high-falutin' talk of vector spaces is related to the simpler language of wave mechanics as it was presented in the last chapter .
13 I have already written in the last chapter about the danger of passive repetition of the teacher 's opinions , and the need to sponsor the craft of writing .
14 As we noted in the last chapter , to say that a decision or action is subject to judicial review is to say that it can be challenged on the basis of the rules and principles of public law which define the grounds of judicial review .
15 Also in the 1930s and 1940s , as has been argued in the last chapter , such scholars as Lazarsfeld , Thurstone , Likert , Stouffer and Guttman had begun to develop a quite different approach to attitudes than had previously been considered .
16 It was seen in the last chapter how minority ethnic and religious strands in the Smolensk guberniia presented a potential , though not an actual , source of unified protest against the central Great-Russian regime .
17 As we have seen in the last chapter the surface of even the smoothest glass is infested with tiny invisible cracks and even if it were not , it soon would be when it had brushed against some other solid .
18 It has been seen in the last chapter how Bishop Tunstall observed that it was not sufficient to burn the heretics and their works and appealed to Sir Thomas More , the best-known English writer of his time , to write against them .
19 There are beautiful marbles from Cyrene in Libya ; and the west has produced other things besides the architectural sculptures noticed in the last chapter .
20 All that I have said in the last chapter about preparation and being able to sort out important issues is again not possible given this scenario .
21 It was said in the last chapter that doubtful law should not be represented as if it were well established .
22 But as is already clear from what was said in the last chapter , the irreducibility thesis , plausible though it may appear at first sight , remains highly vulnerable to criticism and requires important additional assumptions if it is to be taken at all seriously .
23 I stated in the last chapter that , in becoming anorexic , I did the only thing I could .
24 It is an advantage of the analysis offered in the last chapter that it is capable of accounting for authority over a group on the basis of authority relations between individuals .
25 The Keynesian model we constructed in the last chapter was based on the assumption that both consumption and saving were directly and linearly related to current disposable income .
26 I will indicate , as I go through them , the way in which they work : that is , how they fit into the diagnostic story that we developed in the last chapter .
27 The answer depends on the criteria of efficiency and equity that we developed in the last chapter .
28 The sociological neglect of housework was demonstrated in the last chapter .
29 If there is a clear pause ( silence ) between ‘ John ’ and ‘ is it you ’ , then according to the definition of an utterance given in the last chapter , there are two utterances ; however , it is quite likely that a speaker would say ‘ John is it you ’ with no pause , so that the four syllables would make up a single utterance .
30 This model is the one that is most readily comparable with the model of bond evaluation developed in the last chapter .
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