Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] chapter " in BNC.

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1 MAI Systems Corp , now based in Irvine , California has filed for protection for Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code in a Wilmington , Delaware court .
2 I suppose the link between chapter and parish is really administratively through the archdeacon .
3 With the continuing uncertainty over Newlove 's health and teaching capacity , the LEA withdrew its financial support for Chapter III courses but continued to meet the costs of the existing Tutorial Classes .
4 The result is that , chapter after chapter , there are errors ranging from factual detail to total distortion through drastic editing .
5 The kindness of chapter 11
6 In a hidden variable theory , with everything determinate , each electron in the two-slit experiment of Chapter 4 has to go through a definite slit .
7 The storyteller himself would have us recall the command of chapter 12 .
8 The stickiness in prices assumed in the model is not sufficiently severe to change the key result of chapter 4 : only the random component of aggregate demand can affect real output .
9 For instance , the first subsection of Chapter 2 is tagged as Section 2.1 .
10 Finally there is a fundamental characteristic of Friedman 's mark II version of the natural rate hypothesis which , in the light of Chapter 5 , arouses considerable alarm among Keynesians .
11 That will turn out to be of huge significance for the action of chapter 4 .
12 Those are the questions the storyteller and compiler leave in our minds as we enter the action of chapter 4 .
13 Since ( x 1 , … , x n ) is optimal in LP* ( x 1 , … , x n ) , the duality theorem of Chapter 5 states that D * has an optimal solution , say ( v 1 , .
14 Section 5.1 reviews the empirical evidence on the degree to which actual futures prices deviate from the theoretical prices given by the no-arbitrage condition of Chapter 4 .
15 Unlike conventional football books , which tend to skim across the surface of disappointment in chapters entitled ‘ The Lean Years ’ , Hampden Babylon finds a certain self-mocking delight in disappointment .
16 The author has contributed to further discussions of the issues raised in this chapter in chapters 8 and 9 of his book with Glen Bramley , Analysing Social Policy , and in chapters 6–9 of his book with Chris Ham ( see n. 31 in ch. 3 ) .
17 Passages [ 17 ] and [ 18 ] are respectively the unemended and emended versions of a short extract from Chapter 17 of Samuel Butler 's The Way of All Flesh ( changes of wording have been italicized ) The extract concerns the birth of the book 's hero , to the younger son of George Pontifex : [ 17 ] Now , therefore , that the good news [ viz of the birth of Theobald Pontifex 's son ] came it was doubly welcome and caused as much delight at Elmhurst as in Woburn Square [ it caused dismay ] , where the John Pontifexes were now living .
18 We shall perform a number of consequences-seeking calculations of this type in a more abstract setting from Chapter 3 onwards .
19 Our discussion of the dynamics of the boom in chapter 8 focused on the advanced capitalist countries as a group .
20 The programmes of study in chapters 15 to 17 of the Report offer a sound and comprehensive coverage of the essential content which pupils will need to tackle .
21 By defining the object of policy in spatial terms the contradictory interests represented may be understandably subsumed in a real or imagined community identity which stems from or reproduces the notion of shared interests ( see Sue Buckingham-Hatfield 's case study in Chapter 4 ) .
22 The case study in Chapter 2 illustrates this .
23 I shall introduce its fundamental essence in Chapter 3 under the title of cumulative selection .
24 Finally , the assumptions underlying the derivation of the no-arbitrage condition in Chapter 4 are considered in detail in Section 5.3 .
25 Thus , if the no-marking-to-the-market assumption is replaced with an assumption that riskless interest rates are certain , the no-arbitrage condition in Chapter 4 for futures prices still applies .
26 The derivation of the no-arbitrage condition in Chapter 4 relied upon the payment of the capital gains or losses on the shares and futures contracts at delivery .
27 This serves as an introduction to Part II , and more particularly as a prelude to Chapter 6 , because it deals with the subject of fiction itself : something which is strictly not a matter of style , but which is presupposed by the study of style in fiction writing .
28 This is harder to believe than it should be , because textbooks and courses always seem to be structured as if there is a steady progress from chapter to chapter , week to week , grade to grade .
29 The freshness of the writing reflects the boyish excitement with which Lewis wrote it and read it aloud , chapter by chapter , to his circle of friends .
30 He then went on , chapter by chapter , to provide an evolutionary ethology of behaviour as known in his time , treating reflexes , instincts , intelligence ( with learning experiments ) , social behaviour , and finally conceptual thought and purposive self-conscious development .
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