Example sentences of "chapter [num] [conj] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The reasons for this puzzling association of money wage changes and real-wage changes in classical theory are not altogether clear , though we speculated in Chapter 2 that the influence of the quantity theory of money probably played an important part since it anchored the price level to the quantity of money in circulation , releasing the money-wage bargain to determine real wages .
2 It was emphasised in Chapter 2 that the demand for labour is a derived demand — it is derived from the demand for goods and services .
3 The suggestion was discussed in Chapter 2 that the manner in which a pen is held in the hand during writing may be used as an index of speech lateralisation .
4 I was therefore delighted to read in chapter three that the author , talking about oversimplified reasoning in music says , ‘ … . it does not explain why I respond with goose-pimples to Bach 's Kyrie every time I listen to it . ’
5 Specific tests to show which FSA Investment Advertisement Disclaimer is appropriate are set out in Chapter 4 and the wording is given in Chapter 0404.2
6 There is a potency in his warning at the end of chapter fourteen that the world is dependent on time which will end , and man 's most urgent and natural work , therefore , should be to find the means by which he can pass beyond it .
7 I argued in Chapter 5 that the image of the ivory tower in no way describes the contemporary position of higher education .
8 Using the method of comparing population proportions given in Exercise 5 of Chapter 5 and the fact that about one in five twins are identical , check the assertion that the Danish Twin Registry data given in Section 16.1 show evidence of a genetic effect even for ‘ other acute infections ’ .
9 We saw in Chapter 3 that the law now offers you some protection if there is a ‘ transfer of undertaking ’ , although not if there is a mere sale of shareholding control .
10 We noted in Chapter 3 that the son of Richard Glover , of Tyndale Baptist Chapel in Bristol , became a classics don at Cambridge and eventually University Orator .
11 It will be recalled from Chapter 3 that the Partnership Act provides that where no definite duration is set for the partnership any partner may " retire " by giving his co-partners notice , whereupon in the absence of any contrary agreement the firm is dissolved .
12 It was argued in chapter 6 that the physicality of artefacts makes them much harder than language to extricate from the particular social context in which they operate , and that for this reason they pose a particular problem for academic study .
13 It is shown in Chapter 8 that the declaration of dividend payments tends to have a depressive effect on share prices and that the larger the dividend payout relative to the share price the greater the impact on the price .
14 The two major additions are a section on 'sonnets and Soliloquies ' in Chapter 8 and the discussion of the style of four plays ( Henry V , As You Like It , Macbeth and The Winter 's Tale ) which forms Chapter 9 and replaces the original final chapter .
15 It should have become apparent to the observant reader that there are marked inconsistencies between the theory of finance as described in chapter 1 and the basis of strategic analysis as described in chapter 4 .
16 We have seen in Chapter 14 that the density variations that drive free convection may be introduced into a fluid through either temperature variations or concentration variations , and that the two are closely analogous .
17 Thus if z is vertically upwards , the imposed conditions have where the basic notation is that introduced in Chapter 14 and the suffix 0 indicates , as in Chapter 15 , the imposed vertical variations .
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