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

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1 This picture is added to in the next chapter where we examine the informal relations that exist within organisations , and in Chapter 6 where we examine power .
2 This sort of analysis is substantially similar to Jakobson 's discussion of Poe 's ‘ Raven ’ ( Sebeok 1971 : 371–2 ) , which I referred to in the last chapter , and it may well be that the New Critics ' influence lay behind Jakobson 's arguments there .
3 Many of the towns on the Banbury map which Professor Hoskins referred to in the previous chapter fall into this category .
4 Localized variations in voting patterns may reflect changing forms of political alignment and voting behaviour ( see Johnston , Pattie and Allsopp ( 1988 ) for a review ) , and electoral politics will be looked at in the next chapter , but here I shall consider the notion of political culture more widely .
5 A meeting of university presidents was taking place in Beijing , prompted by student unrest in June ( which will be looked at in the next chapter ) , and they were considering the effects that ‘ Heshang ’ might have .
6 The role of finds in dating is looked at in the next chapter , but perhaps the most obvious way in which finds can tell us about the past is by providing evidence about ancient technology .
7 This change of emphasis is reflected in the biographical sources and is undoubtedly largely responsible for the marked differences , alluded to in the previous chapter , between the biographies written by Taskopruzade and those by Ata'i .
8 The combination of different uses in separate parts of one building , rather than within individual units , is dealt with in the final chapter .
9 Gandhi 's tolerant attitude to religions , which will be dealt with in the following chapter , is an indication that he does not consider any religion to have a monopoly of Truth and that includes Hinduism .
10 The further search for a dump for both Raybestos 's asbestos waste and County Cork 's toxic waste will be dealt with in the following chapter .
11 This takes us into an area of discussion — what has broadly come to be known as ‘ the environment ’ — which will be dealt with in the following chapter .
12 Some of those suprasegmental features were dealt with in the previous chapter .
13 Something has already been said as to the assignment of ordinary debts and ‘ choses in action' ; and the law relating to negotiable instruments — bills of exchange , cheques , and promissory notes — will be dealt with in the next chapter .
14 ( Their conversion , in part through the work of English missionaries , in the period after c .700 , is dealt with in the next chapter . )
15 The political leadership within this cultural area assumed by the Franks , the alliance of their kings with the popes , and the achievement of Western Christianity under this leadership are dealt with in the next chapter .
16 International credit market : The main aspects of the euro-credit market will be dealt with in the next chapter ; suffice to state that international banks must consider country/sovereign risk in relation to project loans .
17 These problems are dealt with in the next chapter .
18 The other main aggregates are dealt with in the next chapter where the major macroeconomic policy objectives are discussed .
19 Complex and compound words are dealt with in the next chapter .
20 I have witnessed many occasions when foreigners have unintentionally caused misunderstanding or even offence in speaking to an English person , but can remember very few occasions when this could be attributed to ‘ using the wrong intonation ’ except when a mistake caused a difference in apparent grammatical meaning ( something that is dealt with in the next chapter ) .
21 The meaning of ‘ the capacity to enjoy life ’ within the Alternative Religion will be enlarged upon in the final chapter of this book .
22 Most of the papers referred to in the present chapter are collected in Pappas and Swain ( 1978 ) , which also contains an analytical introduction to the area .
23 These are mere speculations but they are , in fact , no more so than some of the anti-welfare state ‘ theses ’ referred to in the next chapter .
24 The Abyssinian crisis , referred to in the previous chapter , was the first really serious issue which moved British public opinion against fascism .
25 This debate re-opens some of the issues that were touched upon in the first chapter concerning the nature of metaphysics and the argument that Ayer acts in a reductionist way by proscribing , in effect , certain interpretations of reality .
26 It shows how these different styles are likely to have a marked effect on the crime statistics collected by particular police forces , an issue we looked at in the previous chapter on criminal statistics .
27 Then you tell the story of the murder and the subsequent investigation , adroitly working in the fact that there was a red light shining at the vital time and place , using one of the ways of tricking your reader into " noticing and not noticing " this that we looked at in the previous chapter , and you also harp like mad on the impossibility of a person in a black dress or suit having been on hand at the moment the murder was committed .
28 We can see the similarities here between the scientific approach to organisations and its similarity to bureaucracy that we looked at in the previous chapter .
29 The other half ‘ with thee I am well pleased ’ comes from that picture of the Servant of Yahweh in Isaiah 42:1 which we looked at in the last chapter .
30 It is this that I was hinting at in the previous chapter , when I referred to the queen ant as the central data bank .
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