Example sentences of "[prep] [adj] chapter [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In the first section of this chapter we shall study some indicators of present inter-regional economic differences in Yugoslavia .
2 In the remainder of this chapter we shall apply the categories in 3.1 selectively to three texts which are comparable both in length and in that each of them is the opening passage of a short story .
3 In the rest of this chapter we shall drop the assumption that prices are fully flexible and examine the implications of assuming that they are either fixed or at least move only slowly to their equilibrium values .
4 In the last section of this chapter we will examine the attempts that have been made to find out more about the actual extent of crime , and to provide some sort of indication of the ‘ dark figure ’ of crime and to discover the ‘ real ’ rather than the recorded rate and character of crime .
5 In the rest of this chapter we will consider how state policies have reaffirmed the financial advantages that derive from the continuation of a dual structure of production .
6 In the rest of this chapter we will consider how state policies have reaffirmed the financial advantages that derive from the continuation of a dual structure of production .
7 For the purposes of this chapter we will define anxiety as an emotional state usually involving fear , tension and apprehension and commonly associated with anticipation of a threat .
8 Indeed , at the end of this chapter we will be arguing an alternative position ( based on human rights ) which although non-utilitarian nevertheless takes account of the possible reductivist effects of punishment .
9 In the first three sections of this chapter we will outline the legal framework and organizational context in which each set of decisions is taken , and will also say something about the decision-makers themselves .
10 In the remaining sections of this chapter we will concentrate on two of these components : the visual word-recognition system and the auditory word-recognition system .
11 In the rest of this chapter we will look at the different types of weak syllable in more detail .
12 Since it will be a long time before the reflective process turns into action plans , we shall have to make do with what we already know and for the purposes of this chapter we can relate it to Level Three Partnership .
13 Accommodating interpretation implies a degree of evaluation , which for the purposes of this chapter I would like to consider separately .
14 In the rest of this chapter I shall slice the data in the opposite direction and look at which kin relationships provide the basis for mutual aid , beginning with parents and children .
15 In the rest of this chapter I shall describe how I tried to do this , drawing on my own experience and developing mathematical interests and understanding .
16 In the remainder of this chapter I will explore some of the ambiguities and problems which face those who set out to research the police and assess some of the fears of the academic incursion into police society .
17 In the rest of this chapter I will explain our thinking as clearly as I can , for there has been much misunderstanding .
18 In the rest of this chapter I will discuss Creole acquisition in terms of new dialect acquisition , with JC assumed to be the target variety .
19 In the remainder of this chapter I will report some of the attitudes and beliefs about language expressed by some of my young informants .
20 In this chapter we shall be discussing two main forms of physical violation : the use of physical force , and sexual assaults .
21 In this chapter we shall be looking at how this particular group of people might view and understand what is being offered to them by the church at the time of a major bereavement .
22 In this chapter we shall look at ways of smoothing the edges off the jagged initial appearance of data plotted over time ; we shall look at the observations three at a time , taking seriously the spirit of this somewhat sarcastic remark , to get indications of the trend .
23 In this chapter we shall investigate the answers to some of these questions in an example drawn from a debate about health policy .
24 In this chapter we shall first take a look at how the most commonly used measure of national wealth — gross national product ( GNP ) — is constructed , and consider the distribution of GNP across several countries .
25 In this chapter we shall be considering some of these ‘ natural ’ shocks to the system of marriage and asking why they upset some people and are the making of others .
26 In this chapter we shall begin by examining these concerns in some detail .
27 In this chapter we shall work on ways of maintaining the connection with the feeling that animates , gives life to the story or the poem .
28 In this chapter we shall outline the present position in each country and consider the response to the reorganisation of the early 1970s. first , however , we need to consider further the principles which informed the debates about local government structure .
29 In this chapter we shall trace some leading ideas in the history and philosophy of science and shall identify those most influential in International Relations .
30 In this chapter we shall examine only some of the more important types of stratification structure .
  Next page