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

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1 A further chapter looks at other sources of oppression such as ‘ sexual orientation ’ , language and religion .
2 This chapter looks inside local government at internal authority organization , at officer councillor relationships and at the distribution of power inside the town hall .
3 Each article or book chapter counts for one point ; each book counts for ten ; and the productivity trend , needless to say , is on the up and up .
4 The chapter concludes with some examples of how insights gained from psychotherapy can be useful in social work practice .
5 This chapter describes in some detail the procedures for isolation of eggs and pre-implantation embryos , and for the manipulation and observation of embryos at various stages of development .
6 The third chapter deals with Roman art in public places , mostly cities and sanctuaries .
7 This chapter deals with outdoor activities within the school grounds .
8 The remainder of the chapter deals with some circumstances in which nurses are directly involved with assisting patients who have problems in maintaining a safe environment .
9 The chapter ends with some suggestions for strengthening teams through team-building as a way to maximize the clear advantages of team cohesion and minimize the regressive behaviours common in groups especially those that arise from cross-cultural differences .
10 The distinction between grammar and lexis which we used in the last chapter cuts across this distinction between levels .
11 This said , the chapter divides into four parts .
12 Much of our discussion in the latter part of this chapter draws on this research .
13 This chapter explores in more detail the effect of such equivalence classes on parsing phonemes into words .
14 Because of this , community policing is an important part of the work of Easton 's police , and the next chapter focuses on this mode of routine policing .
15 This chapter touches on various points of which the practitioner should be aware , which may usefully serve as a reminder of items to be considered outside the drafting of the conveyance or transfer itself .
16 The chapter begins by contrasting norm- and Criterion-referenced assessment , the former placing candidates relative to other candidates and the latter placing them relative to a description of performance — a criterion statement .
17 Very broadly , the chapter begins from recent preoccupations about decline in British manufacturing , encapsulated in the term deindustrialization , and ends with a major historical turning-point , for manufacturing and for the economy more widely .
18 ChapterS deals with this subject in more detail .
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