Example sentences of "see appendix [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And there one personal explanation when I saw appendix A as opposed to the information on appendix five under page two
2 It rose to something like 35,000 tons per year but then began to tail off ( see appendix D ) .
3 The amount of traffic on the route ( see appendix D ) never increased following the improvements at Foxton , so that in an economic sense the lift from the start was required to perform in a situation where it was not needed .
4 A DEC Rdb/VMS relational database may be created automatically by LIFESPAN RDBI following the instructions in the RDBI configuration file ( see Appendix D ) .
5 See Appendix D , ‘ LIFESPAN RDBI Operational Restrictions ’ .
6 As this village was inaccessible , the enemy patrols were unlikely to reach it undetected , but if they did the platoon headquarters was sufficiently mobile for the captain , sergeant , and their two runners/signalmen to withdraw quickly over the hill , taking their radio with them — a different proposition to moving a 109-set , for now the guerrillas had dry battery radios ( see Appendix No. 5 ) designed by Lieutenant Barcham , a New Zealander , for use by the Independent Companies .
7 ( See Appendix B )
8 ( See Appendix B for the complete list . )
9 These were accepted in April and November 1897 ( see appendix B ) .
10 ( See Appendix B for details ) .
11 See Appendix B for further examples .
12 However we have already seen ( see Appendix B ) that the total number of candidate strings can number in the thousands , so any correction techniques applied to these would reach explosive proportions in terms of time taken and number of additional candidates produced .
13 An alternative notation which may sometimes be more convenient is ( 5 ) , with square brackets marking the fact that this word-meaning is taken to match an entity : If , however , the mind does not feel that BOTTLES is sufficiently specific to identify the target of its attention , then the identification may be extended as in ( 6 ) , where we adopt a plain arrowhead as our representation of qualification : We assume that a qualified entity remains an entity ( see Appendix B ) , and this can more conveniently be represented by our alternative notation as in : It is quite important to stress the retention of the same subscript i in ( 7 ) .
14 The right way to indicate its nature is , therefore , to give instances where it is present , and to describe its interaction with other parts of the system to which it belongs , in particular when the interaction leads to predictions which can be checked ; simple as the system may be , we shall find that successive interactions can swiftly lead to structures of quite satisfying complexity ( see Appendix B ) .
15 This holds good on condition that we are restricting our attention , as in this study , to syntax ; once we take the broader view which embraces speakers ' knowledge of vocabulary as well , then we must admit a real analogue to this relation since speakers are quite aware that their language habitually uses , for example this set of words to instantiate E , and that set of words to instantiate P ( or , in most languages , various sets of words to instantiate the Ps occurring in various different intensional patterns ; see Appendix B , Section 7 ) .
16 1.3 However , RSC Ord 38 and CCR Ord 20 are expressed to be subject to the Civil Evidence Act 1968 ( see Appendix B ) under which hearsay evidence in documents can be put in at trial if a party can not call the witness .
17 This and the Civil Evidence Act 1972 ( see Appendix B ) allow the court to admit hearsay evidence of fact and opinion from both lay and expert witnesses .
18 1.5 Under s11 of the Civil Evidence Act 1968 ( see Appendix B ) parties can plead convictions against one another if they are relevant to issues in the civil proceedings .
19 Notes of the evidence given in those proceedings may be admissible under s2 or s4 of the Civil Evidence Act 1968 ( see Appendix B ) .
20 1.8 The definition of " contributory negligence " in s1(1) of the Law Reform ( Contributory Negligence ) Act 1945 ( see Appendix B ) refers to " the claimant 's share in the responsibility for the damage " ( not the responsibility for the cause of the damage ) .
21 1.37 Limitation in personal injuries actions is governed by the Limitation Act 1980 ( see Appendix B ) which consolidates previous statutes of limitation .
22 The first of these is through the Law Reform ( Miscellaneous Provisions ) Act 1934 ( see Appendix B ) .
23 The present provisions are contained in the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 as amended ( see Appendix B ) .
24 ( For full references to all books cited in the text and details of other works which the reader may find useful , see Appendix B , Bibliography . )
25 The Law Society has published their procedure : where the president of the Law Society is to make an appointment , his staff draw up a short list and the president places the names in the order of his preference : see Appendix B.
26 Flat fees used to be the rule , but since 1 January 1991 the Law Society has introduced a sliding scale of up to £1,000 : see Appendix B. The ISVA charge no fee .
27 For a detailed discussion of the restrictions and the reasons , see Appendix C. We shall adopt the term postverbal adjective for those which appear in the structure exemplified by the following sentences : ( 43 ) last year , their best salesman fell ill the Irishman grew pale confidence tricksters seldom look nervous
28 From Arabel 's Raven by Joan Aiken — see Appendix Year Two .
29 Some doubt is in fact raised about interpreting Hezarfen 's statement as meaning that these three kadis were still , toward the end of the seventeenth century , receiving only 300 akce a day both by Ali 's statement that they were receiving " approximately " 500 akce ( see Appendix I , A ) and by the attributed to Kocu Bey which was presented to Sultan Ibrahim ( 1640–8 ) in 1049–50/1640 in which the author , discussing aspects of the learned hierarchy , says : " Whatever great provinces there are in the divinely-protected [ i.e. Ottoman ] dominions , such as Egypt , Aleppo , Diyarbakir , Damascus , Erzurum , Selanik ( Salonica ) , Budin ( Buda ) , Sofya ( Sofiya ) , Bursa , Edirne , Istanbul [ the kadis of ] all such as these are 500-akce Mollas ' .
30 For the list of county court districts and the courts having bankruptcy jurisdiction over them , see Appendix A. Debtors ' petitions can be presented in whichever county court is specified by Schedule 2 to the rules as being , in relation to the debtors ' own county court , the nearest full time county court if it is more expedient with a view to expediting the petition ( r 6.40(3) ) .
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