Example sentences of "see [prep] chapter " in BNC.

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31 As was seen in Chapter 3 , Moscovici 's theory of social representations also deals with the translation of intellectual notions into common sense .
32 This will be seen in chapter 8 , particularly in relation to accessibility to cultural , educational , information and social services , the improvement of which can enhance the quality of life for rural residents .
33 As we have already seen in Chapter 1 , the proportion of the temporary labour force who consider themselves self-employed ( 15 per cent ) is rather higher than that of the workforce as a whole ( 11 per cent ) .
34 As we have seen in Chapter I , most employment law rights are available only to people having a minimum of four weeks ' service , whilst protection against unfair dismissal for other than trade union activities , even with the law at its most liberal , required six months ' service .
35 Indeed , in this latter case a casual and a short-term contract worker are in many ways indistinguishable , since , as we have seen in Chapter 1 , it is only after four weeks employment that a worker is entitled to a minimum period of notice .
36 Some advocates of corporate social responsibility ( the term is deeply ambiguous , as will be seen in Chapter 9 ) maintain that companies should allow their decisions to be influenced not only by profit , but also by social policy factors .
37 Cain ( 1985 ) argues that it is the unreliability of marriage , no longer , as we have seen in chapter 3 , a contract of total sanctity , which constitutes the economic case for policy interventions to help women in the labour force .
38 As we have seen in Chapter 3 marginal farmers engaged in sheep and beef cattle rearing dominate the upland areas , and many of them are on a ‘ deferred death sentence ’ .
39 All this stood town planning well , as we have seen in Chapter 4 , when the early forms of the statutory planning system were established .
40 There are grounds for suggesting that the market test can produce perverse incentives , as we have seen in Chapter 3 .
41 As was seen in Chapter 5 the form of a graded river approaches a concave curve as a rule , though it may depart from it under certain circumstances .
42 The fact that both these forms of aphasia are frequently observed suggests that there are separate systems for perceiving and producing speech ; and we have already seen in Chapter 6 that research on normal subjects suggests the same conclusion .
43 From a surplus of £385 million in 1970 , Britain had reached an annual deficit of £3,410 million by 1979 , as seen in Chapter 2 .
44 It leads to the Raman effect , which , as we have already seen in Chapter 5 , is many orders of magnitude less efficient than direct resonant absorption .
45 As will be seen in Chapter 6 , however , some of these isolates have been responsible for many of the revolutionary advances in scientific knowledge .
46 As we have already seen in chapter 1 for butane and polyethylene , steric repulsions impose restrictions to bond rotation .
47 Many of these processes can be identified as secondary loss peaks in dynamic mechanical , or dielectric measurements , as will be seen in chapter 13 .
48 A number of examples of their use is seen in Chapter 15 .
49 As already seen in Chapter 1 , possession and ownership in English law are normally " exclusive " , that is , they involve " Keep off ! " actions and attitudes towards the property and towards other people .
50 We have seen in Chapter 14 that the density variations that drive free convection may be introduced into a fluid through either temperature variations or concentration variations , and that the two are closely analogous .
51 Since such a pragmatic account is available , as will be seen in Chapter 3 , we can let the semantics just provide a reading compatible with " some and perhaps all " .
52 As can be seen from Chapter 7 on feeding , high nitrogen can produce imbalance and soft , lush , disease- and pest-prone foliage with roses .
53 There are countless examples from most African countries of a similar negligence of completed investments , although some of this is a by-product of the nature of development aid , as we shall see in Chapter 11 .
54 If men were beginning to abandon their fear of hell , they were clinging with some tenacity to their hopes of heaven , as we shall see in chapter nine .
55 As we shall see in Chapter 6 the closing decades of the century and the early years of the new century were more concerned with the ‘ collective ’ approach than the individual , and younger ministers were only mirroring this change .
56 Political involvement at the national level was , as we shall see in Chapter 9 , fraught with dangers .
57 As we shall see in Chapter 5 , the defence in fact proved conclusive in the GCHQ case itself .
58 Although young children ( say , from eighteen months to six years ) can be quarrelsome ( as we shall see in chapter 8 ) , pro-social actions may be seen in some 10–20 per cent of all social contacts .
59 As we shall see in chapter 11 , such non-constant variability is usually dealt with by a power transformation of the scale of measurement .
60 As we shall see in Chapter 7 , the obvious policy solution is for the government to increase aggregate demand by increasing government expenditure or by reducing taxation , or to increase the money supply ( which will also increase aggregate demand ) .
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