Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] the [num ord] chapter " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 As in the case of the physical events considered in the last chapter in connection with causation and other nomic connection , mental events strictly speaking are to be regarded as individual properties or sets of such properties .
3 Husayn could only contemplate this option with equanimity if most of the Palestine refugees moved out of his territory — presumably back to Palestine , an issue considered in the next chapter .
4 These are considered in the next chapter .
5 This is considered in the next chapter .
6 How such enquiries might be conducted is a question which is considered in the next chapter .
7 Employer policies in relation to trade unions , together with the more general role of employers and their organisations in industrial relations , are considered in the next chapter .
8 It is this topic which will be considered in the next chapter .
9 ( Sidgwick thus avoids the naturalistic fallacy to be considered in the next chapter . )
10 Two alternative approaches to programme budgeting will be considered in the next chapter .
11 Accordingly these are 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 The benevolent influence of a family , such as that depicted in the first chapter of Tom Brown 's Schooldays , reached out to the tenants and other members of the local community ; the girls from the cottages came into the big house as dairy or nursery-maids ; the boys were taken on as under-gardeners or grooms .
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 These questions are addressed in the next chapter .
17 My interpretation of what is going on at the present day is being saved for the next chapter , but some of the most startling results come from the latest ( and most accurately dated ) deposits .
18 You may wonder how this rather high-falutin' talk of vector spaces is related to the simpler language of wave mechanics as it was presented in the last chapter .
19 I have already written in the last chapter about the danger of passive repetition of the teacher 's opinions , and the need to sponsor the craft of writing .
20 This point is expanded in the next chapter .
21 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 .
22 Also in the 1930s and 1940s , as has been argued in the last chapter , such scholars as Lazarsfeld , Thurstone , Likert , Stouffer and Guttman had begun to develop a quite different approach to attitudes than had previously been considered .
23 It was seen in the last chapter how minority ethnic and religious strands in the Smolensk guberniia presented a potential , though not an actual , source of unified protest against the central Great-Russian regime .
24 As we have seen in the last chapter the surface of even the smoothest glass is infested with tiny invisible cracks and even if it were not , it soon would be when it had brushed against some other solid .
25 It has been seen in the last chapter how Bishop Tunstall observed that it was not sufficient to burn the heretics and their works and appealed to Sir Thomas More , the best-known English writer of his time , to write against them .
26 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 .
27 Nor was this resistance to diminish in the post-war period , as will be seen in the next chapter .
28 The significance of this will be seen in the next chapter .
29 One of these — deregulation and liberalization — is evaluated in the next chapter .
30 A distinction was made in the first chapter between three types of risk , objective , estimated and subjective , and the assumption was made that subjective risk is closely related to the concept of arousal as it has been used in much memory research .
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