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

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1 By challenging the right of Parliament to agree to the social chapter against the wishes of the Government and proposing that the treaty will be ratified without the decisions of Parliament , it has underlined the very reasons why there is a need for referendums on the crucial constitutional questions that face us .
2 Will Major and Hurd be able to neutralise the timebomb set by the social chapter amendment ? asks Chris McLaughlin
3 Like the cross-dressing explored in the last chapter , gender inversion remains controversial because it allegedly only inverts , rather than displaces , the gender binary .
4 Husayn could only contemplate this option with equanimity if most of the Palestine refugees moved out of his territory — presumably back to Palestine , an issue considered in the next chapter .
5 You may recall the phenomenon of ‘ jobless growth ’ in the manufacturing sector discussed in the previous chapter .
6 It also entails the preparation of a staffing plan as an important component of the School Development Plan described in the next chapter .
7 This will be a sound basis for the School Development Plan described in the previous chapter .
8 The component is original in its use of the Chart-based architecture described in the previous chapter .
9 It is important to remember the distinction explained in the last chapter between purely generic unascertained goods ( e.g. ‘ 500 tons of wheat ’ ) and unascertained goods from a specific bulk ( e.g. ‘ 500 tons of wheat out of the 1,000 tons in the vessel Neptune ’ ) .
10 This rather sad quote illustrates very sharply a point made in the previous chapter , which is that a field of learning such as physics , which has great power to change our lives , is usually divorced from a consideration of moral issues .
11 Fascist politics , of the sort discussed in the previous chapter , might represent the extremes of prejudice .
12 Changes within the institutions which influence values are taking place and , in general , reflect a gradual shift towards the values of contemporary capitalist societies , corresponding to the process outlined in the previous chapter of incorporating peripheral groups into society .
13 Qualitative forecasting techniques are used to assist and augment the quantitative forecasting process described in the previous chapter .
14 Thus Adorno 's major contribution dates from a period described in the previous chapter as one of relative situational stability and consensus , when , more than at any other time , the machinery of ‘ mass culture ’ worked to considerable effect .
15 In September the Council formulated the general directive quoted in the previous chapter ( see p. 207 ) and the next year , just before it broke up , two new members actually advocated the suppression of polyphonic church music altogether .
16 The sketch of the Copernican Revolution presented in the previous chapter strongly suggests that the inductivist and falsificationist accounts of science are too piecemeal .
17 This chapter continues the analysis of consumer behaviour commenced during the previous chapter .
18 Notwithstanding the need for more investigation , the evidence surveyed in the previous chapter certainly lends weight to this view .
19 In order to look more closely at the assistance reading can give to growth — in both its cognitive ( intellectual ) and affective ( emotional ) aspects — we adopt the list of types of development mentioned in the last chapter .
20 But to be able to handle borderline or other problematic cases with any degree of confidence we need a firmer characterisation , grounded in more basic intuitive judgements of the kind introduced in the previous chapter .
21 These are the loss of the productive , or work role considered in the previous chapter , and the loss of the nurturing , or parenting role .
22 To illustrate this , consider once more the example used in the previous chapter .
23 The second part of the theistic pattern sketched in the last chapter which we need to put under the microscope is that which described God both as personal and as impersonal .
24 How policies are emerging in developing countries to deal with both the general issues of the international political economy discussed in the previous chapter and the more particular ones created by global competition is explored in the next chapter .
25 These services were taking much-needed capital away from industrial investment and they were , some claimed , creating attitudes and styles of living that were inimical to hard work and increased productivity — a claim discussed in the following chapter .
26 Frequent use was made of the bressummer arrangement described in the preceding chapter for the introduction of large openings , such as shopfronts , into pre-existing buildings .
27 This chapter develops and defends the conception of the nature of practical authority outlined in the previous chapter , i.e. authority as involving essentially THE power to require action .
28 How far is it congruent , or in competition with , the model of grammar outlined in the last chapter ?
29 Forehand and McMahon ( 1981 ) have devised a Parent 's Game which continues on from the Child 's Game described in the previous chapter .
30 A powerful recognition of this tenet comes in the fifth chapter of Paul 's letter to the Ephesians .
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