Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb pp] [prep] this book " in BNC.

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1 The guidance given in this book applies to contracts governed by English law .
2 Because so little material exists , the study presented in this book was conceived as an exploratory , pilot survey .
3 There was a higher proportion of officers and NCO 's in Special Forces than in regular formations ( a term used in this book to distinguish Special Forces from other units ) , particularly in the specialised reconnaissance and raiding parties .
4 We have to remember this in considering how far the experience presented in this book is typical .
5 The equipment used in this book is not specialist or complicated , but a thorough checklist is given here of the many items available .
6 A training videocassette based in this book , entitled ‘ Quality in the Job ’ , is available from Guild Sound and Vision Ltd , .
7 In the terminology used in this book task analysis is the correct description of this activity .
8 It is derived entirely from the general meaning of car , together with the semantic properties of the context ( remember that general knowledge concerning cars and operations carried out on them is , on the view of meaning adopted in this book , embedded in the meanings of car , wash , polish , etc . ) .
9 The basic philosophy underlying the approach to personal selling adopted in this book is that selling should be an extension of the marketing concept .
10 But over most of the period covered in this book there are continuous records of some sets of figures , even if they are not always reliable .
11 For the first half of the period covered in this book , and again towards its end , England was involved in foreign wars .
12 But in the period covered by this book society was not quite so hierarchical as before or after ; nor did a man 's place in the sun depend on the number and dignity of his ancestors .
13 Not one important industrial process was produced by Asia or Africa during the period covered by this book .
14 The mounted soldier still had a long way to go and his influence was very considerable in the whole period covered by this book .
15 Over the period covered by this book new rivals have appeared on the Whitehall scene .
16 In other words , in the period covered by this book , the only direct evidence on population figures comes near its start and very close to , or even after , its end .
17 If there was an increase by 1545 , much of it may have come in the years after 1530 , and become important economically only after the period covered by this book ( 75 , p.69 ) .
18 The figures in this series are complete for the period covered by this book apart from a short gap between 1403 and 1411 .
19 Although this is undoubtedly true , on two occasions during the period covered by this book ( 1660 and 1688 ) an invading army ( one from Scotland , the other from Holland ) had been able to exploit a severe domestic political crisis and widespread popular disaffection in order to bring about a change of political regimes .
20 This is simply not adequate as an account of code switching behaviour of the sort described in this book .
21 Only one more raid was mounted in 1940 and that in July , when Lieutenant-General Alan Bourne of the Royal Marines was temporarily running Combined Operations Headquarters ( the name used throughout this book for the directorate , although in fact having some variations of title ) before Keyes 's appointment .
22 ( The general guidance on environment and the implications of visual handicap described in this book are relevant to the needs of pupils with multiple handicap that includes defective vision .
23 The argument made in this book is that it is not to all land-users .
24 The method used in this book to define a unit of goodness , is plausible and , to some extent , in line with scientific practice whereby when a unit of any sort is thus defined , it first becomes accepted , and then quite soon it is unquestionably ‘ true ’ .
25 High on this list is the kind of writing found in this book : the relation , through tortuous analogy , of almost everything discussed in the past to events not merely in the present , but in the author 's own life .
26 Issues of the scale addressed in this book — the transformation of thousands of square miles and millions of lives — put quibbles about style into perspective .
27 The approach described in this book needs to be adapted flexibly as no single approach will work alone and compromises must be made .
28 As we have seen , most of the principal theories of literature discussed in this book have included as part of their purpose the creation of a scientific basis for the study of literature .
29 So far , the case discussed in this book for the extended use of the industrial co-operative as a form of organisation for production or provision has stood primarily upon the proposition that it is an expression of authentic industrial democracy , that such an extension would help to fill a debilitating gap in the practice in the United Kingdom of western liberal principles , to mend what Bertrand Russell calls ‘ this disruption of democracy from within' .
30 The account given in this book , based on the constructional meanings , enables us to give answers to these questions : Why does Oliver imagined her red-haired have two different meanings , one where he is trying mentally to change the lady 's image , and the other where he wonders what sort of person he is going to meet ) ?
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