Example sentences of "[adv prt] in the [adj] chapter " in BNC.

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1 These matters are taken up in the next chapter .
2 This issue is taken up in the next chapter where some of the rules of company law that support the functioning of the market are examined .
3 This we take up in the next chapter .
4 As most of these zones are in Third World countries , these issues will be taken up in the next chapter .
5 And although I move on in the final chapter to consider some of the policy implications of the analysis , the main aim will be to clarify rather than prescribe .
6 ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) .
7 Clive Barker ( 1977 ) of Warwick University has given new substance to the use of games in the training of actors and Brian Watkins ( 1981 ) has evolved a theoretical framework conceptually linking drama and game in a way which I shall attempt to build on in the next chapter .
8 The work of the courts is touched on in the next chapter .
9 This section looks at the range of techniques you can choose from before we move on in the next chapter to examine different ways video can be related to the rest of the language programme .
10 Grammar , as I pointed out in the preceding chapter , can only go so far .
11 As John Cook pointed out in the preceding chapter , it mistakenly assimilates the concepts of capacities like understanding , thinking , remembering , and the other psychological verbs to those of sensations like pain , and thus turns them into specific yet insubstantial and wholly mysterious inner states , available only to private introspection , which correlate in some way with their behavioural signs .
12 As was pointed out in the previous chapter , the plan of the Victorian house and the Victorian city have this in common : that both are so designed that the few who live on the privileged side of the divide need know nothing of the many who are crowded beyond it into a fraction of the space .
13 Doing this allows a development of the ideas set out in the previous chapter regarding the salient institutional features which characterize a place .
14 As it was pointed out in the previous chapter , the reconstruction and expansion of the social services during the last war were dominated by one central principle : universality .
15 As was pointed out in the previous chapter , substantial progress has been made in reducing overcrowding , as of facially defined .
16 Likewise as I pointed out in the last chapter , in dramatic playing a boy may be required to adopt the function of an Abbot of Durham Cathedral , and in so far as he continues to see himself in that role he will continue to signal to others that that is what he is doing .
17 I will concentrate upon two of the more difficult threads in the pattern I attempted to draw out in the last chapter , and will try to develop them further in a more philosophically coherent way .
18 The question is which form will be compatible with the general curriculum aims set out in the last chapter .
19 As I pointed out in the last chapter , working-class attachment to institutional religion never picked up from the moment that peasants moved off the land and became urbanised .
20 But this would be to simplify things for , as I have argued , black kids generally come from the kind of family backgrounds which are not suited for their own educational needs — for reasons which I spelled out in the last chapter , but will summarize as ‘ neglect ’ or ‘ unattainable goals ’ .
21 As we pointed out in the last chapter , not only is the amount of redistribution to be undertaken by the government a pure value judgement on which different individuals and different political parties will disagree , but there is an inevitable trade-off between the competing objectives of efficiency and equity .
22 If you are satisfied that you have glued everything well , you can then proceed with the framing as set out in the next chapter .
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