Example sentences of "described in this " in BNC.

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1 The measurements were made with the system described in this article .
2 In the few cases where the church plan diverges from the conventional arrangement by including only a single side aisle rather than the normal two , this volume , rather than the nave space , can be used to accommodate the dwellings access corridor , although it is noteworthy that in the conversion of St James 's Church , Farnham , Surrey , which is also described in this chapter , the optimum cross-sectional treatment of such an asymmetrical plan placed the longitudinal access corridor in the former nave space , the aisle projection being used to accommodate living-rooms .
3 An urban example of this type of school , St Peter 's at Vauxhall , South London , is also described in this chapter .
4 The riverside warehouses of the London docklands have become favourite subjects for this treatment during the last decade and an outstanding conversion of one such building — Thames Tunnel Mills — is described in this chapter , while the final chapter of the book contains an analysis of a similar building that has been converted to house a range of new uses , including sixty apartments .
5 The conversion of one building of this confident era , Granby House of 1908 , is the final project described in this chapter .
6 Many of the races described in this book produced famous victories .
7 Other animals described in this book have occupied a specific ecological niche where they can quietly pursue their own speciality without embarking on any spectacular radiation in the manner of the ammonoids .
8 We accept responsibility for ensuring that all component parts of the inclusive holiday which you book with us are supplied to you as described in this brochure and to a reasonable standard .
9 However , subject to the Note below , we will pay to our clients the equivalent of such damages as they would be entitled to receive under English law in an English court for any personal injury to the client including illness or death , caused by the negligence , as understood in English law , of the servants or agents of ourselves or of any of our suppliers contracted or sub-contracted by us to provide any part of the arrangements for your holiday as described in this brochure , or excursions as described above , except for air or sea transportation arrangements for which separate conditions apply ( see 8 opposite ) .
10 The experimental results described in this section of the chapter allow a number of conclusions .
11 This possibility is , of course , an important aspect of what has been described in this chapter as stimulus differentiation .
12 Meanwhile , you should carry out your own inspection as described in this book , and write down all the points which come to your notice .
13 Since there still remains so much more archaeological work to do on Santorin , three more completely documented eruptions will be described in this chapter .
14 It is still useful , though , and is described in this chapter .
15 THE AREA TO BE described in this book lies mainly in the north-west corner of Yorkshire where the Three Peaks of Ingleborough , Penyghent and Whernside rise steeply from a compact bedrock of limestone between Dentdale and Malham .
16 However , Homoeopathy can be used for simple acute illnesses such as those described in this book , without a full understanding of its philosophy and theory .
17 For the conditions described in this book it is the selection of the remedy that is of far greater importance than the specific potency used .
18 Introducing an interesting collection of studies of classrooms in different countries , Frankish comments ; ‘ Different as the classrooms described in this issue may appear , it is still surprising that they are so alike ’ .
19 A generalization of the class of solutions described in this section has been obtained by Tsoubelis and Wang ( 1989 ) .
20 The method described in this section has been used by Halilsoy ( 1988 b ) to obtain a class of solutions which appears to generalize the Szekeres solutions .
21 This solution , which appears to be remarkably simple , will be described in this chapter .
22 The exercise of decomposing the system models will aid this process , progressively bringing the systems ideas closer to what can be observed in practice ; imaginative use of unsophisticated computer software can also help , particularly where the level of detail makes manual analysis impracticable ; simple matrices similar to those employed to good effect in many of the studies described in this book can also be of benefit ; not forgetting , of course , the significant value of discussing ideas with experienced staff from the organisation being studied .
23 Encouragingly , some of the research projects described in this chapter have worked on case studies from primary , secondary and tertiary education .
24 The Soviet work described in this historic talk concentrated on high-power pinch discharges lasting only a few microseconds with currents of up to two million amps flowing between electrodes in straight tubes .
25 However , there were several important differences between the cases described in this article and Meadow 's syndrome proper .
26 And if you practise at least some of the exercises described in this book every day , you will soon see a change in your hips and thighs .
27 Although attention is given in the discussions to underlying emotional problems such as we have described in this chapter , some people 's emotional ‘ blocks ’ do not shift in this setting .
28 ( For convenience these are described in this chapter as share transactions , but the same rules apply to the acquisition of assets . )
29 This is the method used in the project to be described in this article .
30 In Section 4.4 , we showed that the pivot can always be chosen to avoid cycling and the procedure described in this section allows us to conclude that if b 1 , … , b m are all integers , then the optimal solution ( indeed , any BFS ) is integer-valued .
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