Example sentences of "in [noun sg] [adj] i " in BNC.

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1 The assumptions themselves have remained more or less intact , and in Part Two I will return to them in developing a ‘ postclassical ’ perspective .
2 In Part Two I will suggest that if they are pushed a little closer to the classical position , via some judicious reinterpretation , the problems dealt with above are eased considerably .
3 In Part Two I will suggest a way in which the important contribution that anomie theory makes to understanding crime can be reformulated in classical terms , much to its benefit .
4 In Part Two I want to try to develop some of this potential and outline a ‘ postclassical ’ perspective : that is , a perspective grounded on the fundamental assumptions made by Beccaria , but with some liberties taken and adjustments made in the light of the various problems it has encountered .
5 In Part One I have briefly outlined the origins and fate of the classical perspective in criminology .
6 In Primary Three I fell in love with another boy because he lent me his ‘ Lo-lo Ball ’ and I thought this meant love !
7 In Figure 11 I show the kind of wiring diagram that would make a single cell responsive to a particular kind of edge , with a particular orientation .
8 In Figure 9.5 I have continued it down to 10 bars , the pressure versus altitude being calculated from adiabatic lapse-rate conditions .
9 For this reason , in Figure 7 I have n't actually drawn the triangle .
10 In spring 1974 I was able to interview about 30 Asian , West Indian and English children between the ages of 8 and 11 .
11 In Chapter 13 I will try to explain why I agree with him on this point .
12 In the following chapter I will prepare the way for an analysis of that kind and in Chapter 11 I will propose an account of theory change in physics that does not hinge on the judgements of individuals or groups .
13 In chapter 4 I suggested that you might try ignoring certain categories of unacceptable behaviour .
14 In Chapter 4 I stressed the importance of preparation before planting — what you do afterwards can not put right what you fail to do before a plant is in the ground and growing away .
15 In Chapter 4 I argue that the concept of women 's ‘ domesticity ’ which is used loosely in sociological writing needs to be broken down into a number of more precise concepts before much sense can be made of women 's similarities/differences on this dimension .
16 In Chapter 4 I show that an attempt to prove the possibility of pluralism by proving the existence of irreducibly " external " relations presupposes a distinction between a subjective and an objective order .
17 In Chapter 4 I discuss the performance of the lexical access component based on real input from the RM1 front-end processor .
18 In Chapter 14 I sketch out the fundamentals of a structuralist theory of truth .
19 In Chapter 10 I try to make some suggestions about the form and content of a practical politics of reproduction which could help in the mobilization of the social forces necessary for the implementation of a programme of structural social change .
20 In Chapter 10 I analyse the inter-subjective conditions of objective validity and the relation between objective validity and truth .
21 In Chapter 8 I analyse the manner in which experiences themselves present themselves to us in a biographical context .
22 In Chapter 1 I distinguished two basic training procedures , one involving discrimination training , the other mere exposure to stimuli , that have been thought to reveal perceptual learning effects .
23 In Chapter 1 I suggested that these two sides to our rational self-interestedness imply that we have an ambiguous , fluctuating relationship with whatever is defined as crime and conformity .
24 In Chapter 1 I emphasized the importance of social classes in the political struggles which take place in modern capitalist societies , and outlined the changes in class structure , as well as the diversity of the political movements and organizations to which classes give rise , in relation to recent politics .
25 In Chapter 1 I referred to the changing attitude among the leaders of Eurocommunism towards the institutions of Western democracy , and their radical reconsideration of the Leninist model of a revolutionary working-class party , which was elaborated in specific historical circumstances and no longer has any relevance for the politics of socialist parties , particularly in the advanced industrial societies .
26 In the Introduction and in Chapter 1 I rehearsed Giddens 's argument concerning ‘ time-space distantiation ’ in contemporary societies and resulting ontological insecurity .
27 In Chapter Five I described how we disguise our motives in conversation through using sub-text .
28 In Chapter vi I suggested a way in which this can be achieved .
29 In Chapter Four I set Out some of the reasons why conferences and other big events are held .
30 In Chapter 5 I propose to look at a different aspect of metalinguistic politics : the way in which grammarians and linguists have projected a male/ female dichotomy on to the languages of the world , and their attempts to use grammar as a tactical weapon in the battle of the sexes .
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