Example sentences of "discussed [prep] [art] next [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Much reading , as we have seen and as is further discussed in the next sections , is concerned with exploring other people 's attitudes and behaviour .
2 The relationships between settlement patterns , local land use and communication networks will be discussed in the next chapters .
3 Some cases in which progress has been made are discussed in the next chapter .
4 There are at least three ways ( others will be discussed in the next chapter ) in which an authority acting correctly may make a difference to what its subjects ought to do , which are all consistent with the dependence thesis .
5 Viruses are more difficult , and are discussed in the next chapter .
6 They are discussed in the next chapter .
7 The next layer of the tree integrates major areas like geomancy , which will be discussed in the next chapter .
8 The potential benefits of this will be discussed in the next chapter .
9 Another major problem — the lack of availability of gur — required a significant rethink , and this is discussed in the next chapter .
10 After the papal decree of 1099 , which will be discussed in the next chapter , Eadmer tried to suppress the fact of Anselm 's homage .
11 The impending changes in the funding and management of state schools in England and Wales , consequent upon the clauses of the Education Reform Bill that will extend local financial management to all schools , are discussed in the next chapter by Hywel Thomas ( 2.2 ) .
12 The implications of this for criterion-referencing and graduated tests are discussed in the next chapter .
13 Chesney Wold , as an older house , is close to the village church ; but this proximity to one 's neighbours came to be regarded as undesirable by the fashionable in the eighteenth century and Regency , due largely to the fashion for ‘ emparkment ’ which will be discussed in the next chapter .
14 For example , Adorno 's Frankfurt School colleague , Walter Benjamin , put forward a more optimistic view of the potentials of the productive forces within advanced capitalism ; this will be discussed in the next chapter .
15 These will be discussed in the next chapter ( below , pp. 118ff. , 126ff . ) .
16 It 's reasonably straightforward as a recording task ( discussed in the next chapter ) and it gives an ephemeral occasion a longer lease of life .
17 Of the Latin church music of Jacques Mauduit ( 1557–1627 ) , a Catholic , little survives except the end of his Requiem for Ronsard ( 1586 ) , an early and probably uncharacteristic work in the peculiar style of musique mesurée à l'antique which will be discussed in the next chapter ( p. 284 ) ; we know that he employed instruments in his annual Holy Week concerts at the Abbaye Saint-Antoine and the St. Cecilia celebrations in Notre Dame .
18 For example ferruginous crusts , or ferricrete , are almost certainly fossil features as they probably form in wetter climates and are discussed in the next chapter .
19 The influence of childbearing patterns on fetal mortality is discussed in the next chapter , after certain basic rules on the effects on viability and mortality of infants and children are established .
20 These focal places will be discussed in the next chapter .
21 Arable will be discussed in the next chapter .
22 ( This view of the literary text as a system is developed in the work of the Prague School and is discussed in the next chapter . )
23 The growth in value and volume of overseas trade will be discussed in the next chapter , but it is appropriate to consider here the provision of shipping and of port facilities .
24 Some cases will be discussed in the next chapter .
25 The evolution of de Gaulle 's Algerian policy will be discussed in the next chapter , but at this point it should be noted that until the summer of 1959 the policy was essentially a holding operation .
26 All of this change was brought about by pressure from the integrated education movement discussed in the next section .
27 Both ideas will be discussed in the next section .
28 They can be plotted against the explanatory variable ( here time ) once more , to see if all the trend has indeed been extracted ; this is discussed in the next section , under the heading ‘ reroughing ’ .
29 Other works of reference are discussed in the next section .
30 In the zero-address computers discussed in the next section , some instructions require only an operation code field while others require an operand specification as well , so considerable variation in instruction length is possible .
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