Example sentences of "to this book " in BNC.

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1 The third aspect to this book is it 's 40-page recipe section .
2 She was a professional dancer at 12 ; her father partnered her on stage and , according to this book , did far worse to her off it .
3 To this book ‘ must be given the credit for preserving the ideas of equestrian art to the present day , because it was this book that formed the basis of its renaissance ’ .
4 According to this book , the new cathedral 's strategic site had been hard to acquire .
5 When I first approached The Smiths in regard to this book , although treated with sympathy from their manager , I was waved aside without so much as an acknowledgement .
6 The rock-climber is held on a rope by clipping himself on to a harness thingy ( if you 've come to this book for technical information , boy are you going to be disappointed ) that straps round his thighs and crotch , so as a quick guide to who the climbers are in the pub , just watch for those who seem to be constantly fiddling around in their genital area .
7 They are , however , relevant to this book for that reason alone ; but they are also instructive in showing the transition to the transcendent ideas of the mystics .
8 Today that analogy seems almost trivial , yet , as Professor L. M. Brown points out in his stimulating introduction to this book , in the 1930s there was an almost pathological fear of new particles .
9 According to this book , contributions of goodness have been made to the Created God , albeit unknowingly , by the countless thousands of individuals who , through many centuries have deliberately lived their lives constantly expanding , supporting and practising those human traits universally acknowledged as virtues .
10 In contrast , the contributors to this book , whilst differing between themselves in many respects , share both a critical refutation of the manner in which the inner city has commonly been taken as unproblematic and a belief in the need to use the vocabulary of popular debates to propose alternative conceptualisations of urban crisis and to subject current policy to critical examination .
11 As you read in the introduction to this book , when people eat high-fibre diets they excrete more calories in their stools ( faeces ) .
12 In the preface to this book Anne and Don Byrne state that instead of taking the usual text book approach to psychology they have ‘ decided to identify those areas of psychology which are directly relevant to the practice of nursing . ’
13 Hello and welcome to this book of performance poems .
14 A good example , relevant to this book , surfaced in the previous chapter where we discussed ‘ overinclusive thinking ’ as an extreme , clinical , manifestation of divergent thinking .
15 The climbing and the people who climb are central to this book , and Dennis 's descriptions of both are rich , but rich with sensation , humanity , humour , magnanimity .
16 What he said — if contemporary accounts are to be believed — includes the first use of the word that , as a geographical descriptive and identifier , is central to this book and , if one accepts the dominant economic theses of today , central to the future development of the planet .
17 The introduction to this book said that the Himalayas have formed an impassable barrier in the distribution of Eastern wildlife .
18 ( The Appendix to this book gives you the basis for making a tape .
19 In his excellent introduction to this book , John Ward describes the Prince as ‘ an amateur in the best sense of the word … he works for the love of it ; seriously , modestly , with much thought as well as appetite . ’
20 ‘ What was novel in the fifteenth century was that these rich people ( the upper middle classes ) began to build splendid dwellings for themselves in such great numbers ’ writes Mr Thornton , and the fact that interior decoration appears in something approaching its present-day form in this period is the key to this book .
21 Roderick 's last , and possibly finest , contributions to this book were the Theorems XII and XV of Chapter 1 which were completed in 1985 shortly after the serious fall which perhaps precipitated the leukaemia from which he failed to recover , despite repeated blood transfusions .
22 In the introduction to this book industrial culture was identified as a component of base as was the role of the state in terms of ‘ reacculturation ’ .
23 The drawing that forms the frontispiece to this book is poised on the borderline between fact and fiction .
24 Many of the young mothers contributing to this book would identify with a lot of her responses and feelings .
25 This applies to this book as much as to any other .
26 The most common of these forms together with other useful precedents are set out in Appendix C to this book .
27 Copies of each of these forms are to be found in Appendix C to this book as forms 3 , 4 and 5 .
28 ‘ I felt that I should hire a fully fledges historian , and Dr Kathryn Castle was terribly important to this book , as was her husband Paul , who is also an academic .
29 To take the particular case of relevance to this book , adjectives in English are , broadly , those words which can instantiate the P in both patterns of : Verbs can instantiate the latter position but not the former ; the lexical meaning expressed by a given verb must , exactly , undergo a change of syntactic class in order to do this , this usually being marked by an overt morphological change .
30 This comment from the editors in their introduction to this book spells out the dilemma for lesbians the whole world over .
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