Example sentences of "in the previous [noun sg] we " in BNC.

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1 Why , because I have , in the previous discussion we 've just had , I emphasised the limits on presidential power , on direction .
2 In the previous chapter we saw how anthropology was sometimes used by them to show the historical particularity of institutions which under capitalism were represented as eternal .
3 In the previous chapter we looked at crime and criminality in a very broad and general manner .
4 In the previous chapter we examined the strand of thinking and policy development that is centred on co-ordination .
5 In the previous chapter we identified the major variables which influence the current account of the balance of payments and examined how automatic and discretionary adjustments operate to rectify payments imbalances .
6 In the previous chapter we saw that there were social class differences in mortality and morbidity among the older age groups .
7 In the previous chapter we discussed some of the factors which might be involved in the identification of written and spoken words .
8 In the previous chapter we discussed the ways in which local government has changed its approach to planning .
9 As in the previous chapter we shall at this stage keep the discussion fairly general , leaving more precise discussion to later chapters , in which we consider tests of rational expectations in specific contexts .
10 In the previous chapter we have defined this relative price term as the current price in the local market relative to the expected current average price across all markets .
11 In the previous chapter we listed the five principal areas of choice for any graph search mechanism .
12 In the previous chapter we saw , on purely statistical grounds , that any particular large mutation is inherently less probable than any particular small mutation .
13 In the previous section we have examined Marx 's and Engels 's views about the evolution of the family .
14 In the previous section we have seen how public figures often write about themselves for a variety of reasons — one of which could just be straight-forward self-centredness .
15 In the previous section we indicated the direction of changes in national income and aggregate demand when there were increased or reduced injections into the circular flow .
16 In the previous section we identified a basic sequence from which ‘ trouble ’ emerges as a cycle of offence and retribution , elaborated in later phases to include a secondary cycle based upon past occasions of offence .
17 In the previous section we described and accounted for the unequal distribution of wealth in Great Britain in terms of the ownership and control of forms of private productive property .
18 In the previous section we suggested that you devise a simple diary to log in these assignments .
19 In the previous section we mentioned that the programmer using fixed-point binary format could consider the binary point to be at an appropriate position in the word for each item of data .
20 In the previous section we argued that the cereal-packet image of family life in modern Britain was seriously misleading in that , at any one time , relatively few families conform to the image and many households never do .
21 Learning from our meandering in the previous section we shall start straight away with Gauss 's law .
22 In the previous section we analysed the factors determining aggregate demand in this economy , in other words the aggregate demand curve .
23 In the previous section we suggested that a government could use taxes and welfare benefits to redistribute income-earning potential and thereby enforce its value judgements about equity while leaving the market economy to take care of allocative efficiency .
24 In the previous section we concentrated on two axes of the search space : time and level of abstraction .
25 At the point nearest to the Sun , , so that this equation reduces to With this value substituted for W in the previous equation we have .
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