Example sentences of "chapter [vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This chapter crystallises the main issues relevant in the management of a surveying practice and the internal organisation necessary to manage a project successfully .
2 This chapter encourages a similar degree of growth and awareness in your sexuality and your ability to create and to sustain good sexual relations with others .
3 The final four chapters ( Ch. 11–14 ) examine the phases in the political and social re-organisation of sexuality in the twentieth century : in relationship to the weakening of the authoritarian consensus ; as part of the social restructuring attendant on the growth of the welfare state ; in terms of the transforming effects on long-term changes in the social structure , which gave rise to the short era of ‘ permissiveness ’ ; and finally the last chapter offers a brief description of the political and moral conjuncture in which the book was written .
4 The discussion in this chapter has a two-fold purpose .
5 They are the editors , they 're not the sole authors so each chapter has a different author erm and like all books some are stronger than others but what I would like you to do for the next , by the time we meet next time , that 's on Monday the next lecture , please have read chapters one and two of that book .
6 The book is consistently thought-provoking and written with one eye firmly fixed on the reader 's attention span : each chapter has a different theme and has numerous subsections , each with its own headline .
7 This chapter has a double focus .
8 This chapter has the practical purpose of showing how the apparatus of linguistic description can be used in analysing the style of a prose text .
9 In its present form it is spelt Forsey , and its use in this chapter has the additional advantage of illustrating that various dictionaries of surnames are not accurate with regard to the meaning of this particular name ; they are at best only partly right , and at worst totally wrong .
10 That nauseating first chapter contains a graphic description of an axe murderer 's modus operandi ( ‘ You have to spell it out clearly , simply to portray just how fucking disgusting the whole thing is ’ ) ; the author weaves the killer into another , quite awesomely sordid narrative involving AIDS and gerbils .
11 Philippa Russell 's chapter reviews a wide spectrum of ideas and work , but it is clear that disability is an area in which much more research is needed and that policy and practice should both be reviewed in the light of such research as it becomes available .
12 This chapter reviews a wide range of literature which bears on relationships between arousal and memory .
13 The concluding part of the chapter reviews the recent history of management reform .
14 This chapter reviews the basic processes that underlie the gathering and use of information for decision making in schools .
15 This chapter describes the various roles that the Bank takes on , and puts them in the context of the overall powers that it enjoys , particularly in relation to the supervisory activities carried out and the possibility of the emergence of a European Central Bank .
16 The first part of this chapter describes the conceptual framework underlying our predictions about heroin use in Wirral , and is followed by an account of our second survey of problem drug use and our forecasts of future prevalence .
17 The final and longest chapter describes the potential applications of LB films and stresses those areas in which the author feels the greatest opportunities exist for industrial and commercial exploitation .
18 This chapter uses the first measure to give an outline indication of how big a part credit , overall , plays in consumer spending , and how that has changed over time .
19 The argument of this chapter bears a superficial resemblance to familiar attempts to base morality on the claim that human beings are naturally unselfish and behave egotistically only out of ignorance .
20 A promising technical manual is due out from David & Charles in April : Peter Thompson 's Propagator 's Handbook ( £14.99 , 0 7153 0047 4 ) , whose opening chapter bears the appealing title , ‘ Why bother ?
21 Each chapter examines a particular aspect of early Anglo-Saxon society .
22 The next chapter examines the governmental context of Charles 's fiscal and monetary methods : his imitation of late-Roman emperors was something more than a charade or a figleaf for impotence .
23 On the way , between these debates , the chapter examines the major changes which have recently taken place in the geography of manufacturing in the UK , and explores the important and continuing debates over how to explain them .
24 However , farmers are n't the only group to value land and landscape and so the last section of this chapter examines the varying ways in which land and landscape can be assessed by other groups .
25 This chapter examines the theoretical justification for such controls , that is , the case for intervention .
26 This chapter examines the Conservative record throughout the 1980s up to the passing of the 1990 NHS and Community Care Act .
27 This chapter examines the likely impact of changes in size , composition and role on the performance of new-style Health Authorities , particularly DHAs .
28 The following sections of this chapter lists the full range of services that MAS and other departments are able to offer in conjunction with an acquisition .
29 The final section of the chapter draws the emerging picture of the moral relations between the conscientious citizen and his state , assuming it to be reasonably just .
30 The seventh focuses on cohesion ( reference , substitution , ellipsis , temporal links , conjunctions and lexical fields ) , and the concluding chapter applies the above modes of analysis to W.H. Auden 's " This lunar beauty " .
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