Example sentences of "[verb] in 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 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 .
3 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 .
4 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 .
5 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 .
6 Another convert was Emily Holt ( 1836–93 ) , the historical novelist , whom we mentioned in the preceding chapter .
7 The first way to do this , as I mentioned in the previous chapter , is to underline the punch with a loud shout .
8 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 .
9 As we mentioned in the previous chapter ( Section 7.1 ) spontaneous speech and written language have many important differences .
10 As we will describe in the final chapter , we should plan from strength and not from weakness .
11 For convenience , biographies will be included in the present chapter , while catalogues will be treated in the next .
12 Twelve members of the European Community moved towards the standardization of workers ' rights as contained in the Social Chapter of the Maastricht Treaty .
13 One other provision , the Control of Misleading Advertisements Regulations 1988 , will be considered in the present chapter .
14 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 .
15 These are the loss of the productive , or work role considered in the previous chapter , and the loss of the nurturing , or parenting role .
16 The policy was , therefore , broadly passive per se and the primary issue is its stop/go effect , which was considered in the previous chapter [ Artis , 1978 ; 1981 ; Clower , 1969 ; Croome and Johnson , 1970 ; Goodhart , 1973 ] .
17 The meanings of these expressions was considered in the previous chapter , and it may be expected that they will be interpreted in essentially the same way in this context .
18 It is this second meaning which will be addressed in the following chapter .
19 The religious or mystical order clearly supports the secular establishment , rather than opposing it as in some of the spirit possession cults we reviewed in the previous chapter .
20 The sketch of the Copernican Revolution presented in the previous chapter strongly suggests that the inductivist and falsificationist accounts of science are too piecemeal .
21 In fact the conditional theory adopts some of the best points of several of the theories found wanting in the previous chapter .
22 As we noted in the previous chapter , the nation of Israel occupied a central place in the realisation of this hope , serving as the gathering-point of the nations ( Isa. 24:23 ; Zech. 14:9 ; Obad. 21 ) .
23 Medical science was not yet equipped for investigation into near-death experiences , to which we shall refer in the final chapter ; almost the only form of resuscitation with which doctors were familiar was that following near-fatal immersion in water , accompanied , as it often is , by a rapid replay of the victim 's life .
24 It has also been argued in the previous chapter that these singularities have similar properties to the fold singularities that occur for colliding impulsive waves as described in Section 8.2 in terms of the behaviour of neighbouring geodesics .
25 In the explanation of landforms found in deserts , the possibility of valley formation by streams in the more humid parts of the Pleistocene can not be ignored , as will be seen in the following chapter .
26 As seen in the preceding chapter , the struggle between Jew and Arab for Palestine became largely an inter-statal one from 1945 onwards .
27 As we have seen in the preceding chapter , some of these controls have overtly political agendas .
28 Young people do not come readily with their enquiries to the CAB , as has been seen in the previous chapter .
29 For these reasons , specialist services have developed at a fast pace within the CAD , as has been seen in the previous chapter .
30 As we have seen in the previous chapter , there may be several other processor registers accessible to the programmer apart from the accumulator , for example the MQ register .
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