Example sentences of "in this book [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 In this book they will be firmly treated as biological objects .
2 Now in this book they will read that the progressive forces of the late eighteen hundreds and the early nineteen hundreds will endeavour to educate the workers from the er , mythological and textile industries were not basically communists .
3 The physical implementation and application areas of microcomputers are thus different from mainstream computers , but at the instruction set level which we discuss in this book they can be treated as variations on the central Von Neumann model .
4 For the first time in this book we shall take a closer look at one branch of the proletariat .
5 Sparta did not abandon her aims in Thessaly ; in 426 the Spartans founded a colony at Herakleia in Trachis , which commanded the Thessalian border ( p. 131 ) ; and later in this book we shall follow this thread of Spartan policy further still ( see p. 153 and chapter 14 , p. 186 ) .
6 In this book we shall use ASE nomenclature , although for many substances this will be the same as the IUPAC nomenclature .
7 In this book we shall assume , for working purposes , that a semantic theory is truth-conditional .
8 In this book we will be looking at the level at which facilities are provided in electronic hardware , as they might be seen by a system programmer about to implement the most basic software on the computer .
9 In this book we will be using verbal , informal descriptions rather than such a formal language for two reasons ; ( a ) these languages define more detail than we usually wish to consider ; and ( b ) they describe complete computers , whereas we wish to look at any stage at a particular aspect of a number of computers .
10 In this book we will be using the ‘ C-word ’ in these senses to refer to the present penal situation in England and Wales , albeit with slight embarrassment and the worry that it has been used so often and for so long that there is a danger that it may be losing its dramatic impact .
11 In this book we will be discussing mainly features which are easily seen in the landscape , from deserted villages to fields and churches .
12 In this book we will look at the kinds of things you have to do to respond to each type of question .
13 If you follow the guidelines given in this book it can only help and certainly will not harm .
14 If you look at the pressed flower pictures in this book you will see that I have chosen backing materials that contrast with or complement the colours of the flowers .
15 In this book you will probably have noticed that we use " you " quite often .
16 In this book I shall be following an understanding of modernity established by the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre ( 1981 ) and the sociologist Peter Berger ( 1969 ) .
17 I 'm afraid that later in this book I shall at last blow her cover — I know she will forgive me .
18 In this book I shall use the awkward but evocative term hegemon to describe the asymmetry in the global system .
19 There are different hazards in different countries , and in this book I could not possibly cover every health and safety risk in every country of the world .
20 Later in this book I will argue the importance of this approach to develop skills of ‘ language across the curriculum ’ , but in the lower primary booklets produced by the Science Education Programme for Africa ( SEPA ) we have a brilliant prototype for developing basic scientific and mathematical skills across subject boundaries .
21 In this book I will argue not only that these are indeed constraints on the form of knowledge but also that they are constraints on all knowledge which should be seen as ideological in the sense in which Marx uses it .
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