Example sentences of "[be] [verb] in the [num ord] chapter " in BNC.

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1 These will be explained in the next chapter .
2 First , as will be explained in the next chapter , we are not yet sure exactly which theory successfully combines general relativity and quantum mechanics , though we know quite a lot about the form such a theory must have .
3 Their history will be traced in the next chapter .
4 Nozick 's State is not neutral , and his principle ( principle 1 above ) is not a principle of neutrality , but it shares with the doctrine of neutrality an anti-perfectionist bias and will therefore be examined in the next chapter .
5 New positional fields are established after the main axis is set up — those that give rise to the limbs will be examined in the next chapter .
6 The Chinese approach to landscape , including the forces underlying their concept of dragons , will be examined in the next chapter , which may enable parallels to be drawn with British examples .
7 Whether , and how far , he changed in his later years must be examined in the next chapter .
8 The argument that public sector employment has expanded so much that it has absorbed too much labour and it has thus had an adverse effect on the national economy will be examined in the next chapter .
9 It is this topic which will be considered in the next chapter .
10 ( Sidgwick thus avoids the naturalistic fallacy to be considered in the next chapter . )
11 Two alternative approaches to programme budgeting will be considered in the next chapter .
12 His circle of friends and pupils , the younger of whom will have to be considered in the next chapter , was vast .
13 Secondly , he may be liable to his purchaser for breach of a term of his contract — a matter to be considered in the next chapter .
14 Even in this chapter the discussion of The Winter 's Tale had occurred in the first edition much earlier in the book , from where it has been removed and rewritten to be included in the last chapter .
15 We still await proper studies of these terms , but one kind of approach will be sketched in the next Chapter under the rubric of conventional implicature , another will be indicated in Chapter 6 in discussion of the conversational uses of well ( see Owen , 1981 ) , and a third may be found in Smith & Wilson ( 1979 : 180 ) , elaborated in Brockway ( 1981 ) .
16 The general remarks on effective display made in the appendix to chapter 7 are important to recall when plotting , and some further remarks on this subject will be made in the next chapter .
17 As will be seen in the next chapter , when the republican wing under de Valera took over as the Fianna Fáil party in the 1930s , constitutional law was restructured , according to both a reformed republican ideology and current Roman social teaching , and in those areas where the high clergy thought it necessary .
18 Nor was this resistance to diminish in the post-war period , as will be seen in the next chapter .
19 The significance of this will be seen in the next chapter .
20 Such stories , and they are legion , are quite accurate with respect to the intention and perspective of business and marketing interests , but it will be argued in the next chapter that they may be a poor foundation for an understanding of the nature of consumption .
21 This weaker account seems to me promising in its general approach , and the theory I shall be supporting in the next chapter is distinctly similar .
22 This is mainly to be found in the last chapter of the book .
23 As it is , more or less by definition , an extra First World phenomenon , the question of the comprador mentality will be resumed in the next chapter .
24 There are at least three ways ( others will be discussed in the next chapter ) in which an authority acting correctly may make a difference to what its subjects ought to do , which are all consistent with the dependence thesis .
25 The next layer of the tree integrates major areas like geomancy , which will be discussed in the next chapter .
26 The potential benefits of this will be discussed in the next chapter .
27 After the papal decree of 1099 , which will be discussed in the next chapter , Eadmer tried to suppress the fact of Anselm 's homage .
28 Chesney Wold , as an older house , is close to the village church ; but this proximity to one 's neighbours came to be regarded as undesirable by the fashionable in the eighteenth century and Regency , due largely to the fashion for ‘ emparkment ’ which will be discussed in the next chapter .
29 For example , Adorno 's Frankfurt School colleague , Walter Benjamin , put forward a more optimistic view of the potentials of the productive forces within advanced capitalism ; this will be discussed in the next chapter .
30 These will be discussed in the next chapter ( below , pp. 118ff. , 126ff . ) .
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