Example sentences of "discuss [prep] the previous " in BNC.

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1 The most important aspect of these passing remarks in The Communist Manifesto however , have , already been discussed in the previous chapter .
2 Leaving aside manslaughter and causing death by reckless driving , offences discussed in the previous chapter , the ladder of offences runs from reckless driving , through drunken driving and careless driving , down to various offences of failure to obey traffic signs and failure to maintain a vehicle in a roadworthy state .
3 A possible mechanism whereby the disaggregated and reconstituted bud could form limb-like structures might involve a reaction-diffusion mechanism of the type invented by Turing , as discussed in the previous chapter .
4 Effective allocation of funds , and subsequent monitoring of expenditure , is the basis for ensuring that library policy ( as discussed in the previous chapter ) is translated into provision .
5 The psychological barrier , whereby potential clients feel that the CAB worker may not empathise with their predicament , was discussed in the previous chapter .
6 It may be grouping error as discussed in the previous paragraph .
7 As discussed in the previous chapter , this view argues that distinct political processes operate at the national and the local level .
8 The role of the clinical teacher has been discussed in the previous chapter .
9 Hanson , Britain 's largest break-up specialist retains certain parts of the conglomerates which it has taken over , but has as a result itself became a conglomerate — as discussed in the previous subsection .
10 As discussed in the previous chapter , relationships with kin will also be affected by the higher incidence of divorce and remarriage , which may weaken the support available to the old living alone , especially because , in such interactions , the notion of reciprocity over time is so important .
11 These results are not too surprising given the research findings discussed in the previous chapter and suggest that what is inherited as vulnerability to psychosis forms a broad set of dispositions that include both temperamental and cognitive features .
12 An important phase in this was achieved in the diplomatic efforts initiated by the Red Cross Resolution of 1965 which eventually led to the 1977 Geneva Protocols , discussed in the previous section .
13 In the example passages of test data discussed in the previous section , four out of the 36 words in error contained an unknown character .
14 The arguments in defence of individualism discussed in the previous chapter are widely held to defeat holism utterly by demonstrating the reducibility of all theories about social wholes .
15 Fortunately , the legal definition of crime incorporates the assumption of its ‘ naturalness ’ to free and rational human beings , which was discussed in the previous section .
16 This facet of housework , discussed in the previous chapter , is unrelated to such factors as number of children , technical aids and amenities , and so on .
17 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 .
18 The fraction can be represented as a signed number by any of the methods discussed in the previous section .
19 Most of the arithmetic and logical operations discussed in the previous chapter are ( or can be reorganized as ) binary operations ; that is , they require two operand values .
20 The experiments discussed in the previous section make it clear that most of the experiences which can be recalled if people are woken up through the night are not normally remembered in the morning .
21 The results for one set of three questions on a recipe was in the GT4 reference test and has already been discussed in the previous chapter .
22 You may recall the phenomenon of ‘ jobless growth ’ in the manufacturing sector discussed in the previous chapter .
23 Fascist politics , of the sort discussed in the previous chapter , might represent the extremes of prejudice .
24 In the examples discussed in the previous chapters , such as the work of Munn , it was clear that the individual is already closely oriented towards a social order by external forms such as the landscape , in which conceptions of the person and of society are literally grounded .
25 The needs of the user groups of these two divisions were discussed in the previous chapter .
26 Deduction is distinct from the induction discussed in the previous section .
27 These trends have reinforced the already closer contact between farmers and their workers brought about by mechanization and the declining size of the labour force which were discussed in the previous chapter .
28 It is necessary to consider the social context of industrial relations as well as the labour process ; and here the new sociology of work , discussed in the previous chapter , is of central relevance .
29 In this sense , studying mutations is a bit like using inhibitors to block particular metabolic processes , and has both the strengths and weaknesses of such methods , discussed in the previous chapter and in Criterion Four .
30 Adoption of such methods implies significant changes for accounting , beyond those discussed in the previous section for ‘ cost of quality ’ calculations .
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