Example sentences of "we [verb] [prep] the previous " in BNC.

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1 As we argued in the previous chapter , this profits squeeze fundamentally reflected overaccumulation .
2 The religious or mystical order clearly supports the secular establishment , rather than opposing it as in some of the spirit possession cults we reviewed in the previous chapter .
3 As we mentioned in the previous chapter ( Section 7.1 ) spontaneous speech and written language have many important differences .
4 In England and Wales the position is now governed by the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , section 78 , the terms of which we encountered in the previous chapter .
5 As we noted in the previous chapter , the nation of Israel occupied a central place in the realisation of this hope , serving as the gathering-point of the nations ( Isa. 24:23 ; Zech. 14:9 ; Obad. 21 ) .
6 We noted in the previous section that the addition of a second component to a liquid can lower the freezing point ( see figure 6.33 ) .
7 So they actually bench marked the maintenance phase of the project and found this approach to be three hundred percent more productive than the approach we showed on the previous slide .
8 This chapter explores why external change in the international political economy has had the uneven impact on industries we showed in the previous chapter .
9 However he should be aware that this might become one of his duties if for any reason we revert to the previous arrangements after the initial trial .
10 The main emphasis of the classical writers on organisations that we examined in the previous chapter was upon the formal characteristics of organisations , particularly in terms of organisational structure .
11 The first is a version of the externality argument we examined in the previous chapter .
12 The first is the natural monopoly problem , which we examined in the previous chapter .
13 The version of the natural rate hypothesis which we examined in the previous section contained just two behavioural relationships , the aggregate demand function and the aggregate supply function .
14 If being a real person implies consciously living before God , as we saw in the previous chapter , then the integrity of a man and woman living together needs the further consciousness of God in both their lives .
15 The problems of Kosovo , as we saw in the previous section , are mainly economic .
16 We saw in the previous chapter how productive property is inherited and distributed amongst kin , and how the patterns of wealth ownership have changed over time .
17 And , as we saw in the previous chapter , he gave science a religious sanction , in that it promised the restoration of a dominion over nature that had been God 's intention for humanity .
18 As we saw in the previous section , there is an understandable reluctance to move against firms that have competed successfully and won market share .
19 The transportation of useful plants from one part of the world to another had begun in the eighteenth century , and we saw in the previous chapter how Kew Gardens became the hub of the British empire 's efforts to replace indigenous species with imported ones of greater commercial value .
20 We saw in the previous section that there are limits to rationality , and that thought can and does break through those limits on different levels .
21 Then , as we saw in the previous chapter , it was introduced in Scotland in 1989 and in England and Wales in 1990 , but it lasted for a very short period .
22 As we saw in the previous chapter on Leadership , the key to success in leadership is to obtain the best ‘ mix ’ of attention to task and attention to people , taking the total situation into account .
23 As we saw in the previous paragraph , there are many kinds of user .
24 We saw in the previous section that the formula of a molecular compound shows the number of atoms of each element in one molecule of the compound .
25 We saw in the previous section that a solution is a homogeneous mixture of at least two components .
26 As we saw in the previous section , a great problem for rule-based hypothesize-and-test systems is the difficulty of matching a higher-level description to a partially determined representation of the input .
27 As we saw in the previous section , the model is extremely complicated .
28 As we saw in the previous chapter , properties of the blackboard model developed for HEARSAY-II turned out to be incompatible with certain characteristics of the speech processing task .
29 As we saw in the previous chapter , HARPY , HWIM and Hearsay-II relied heavily on strong interactions .
30 Furthermore , the above is transcribed into fine-class phonemes and , as we saw in the previous section , we can not expect the front end to be so accurate , and indeed we may not want it to try .
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