Example sentences of "this [noun] [am/are] [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 Regulations governing this grant are contained in The Social Fund Maternity and Funeral Expenses ( General ) Regulations 1987 ( Statutory Instrument 1987 No. 481 ) , the Social Security ( Claims and Payments ) Amendment Regulations 1988 ( Statutory Instrument 1988 No. 522 ) , the Social Fund Maternity and Funeral Expenses ( General ) Amendment Regulations 1989 SI 1989/379 and the Social Fund Manual Page 12 .
2 Overall industry data of this kind are collected in Table 11.6 , giving an indication of profitability for the industry as a whole .
3 Displays of this kind are found in a wide variety of birds , but they are most common in the ground-nesting species .
4 The results of the benefits analysis in this case are summarised in Fig 14. 8 .
5 The relationships between site factors and soil erosion which emerged from this study are given in Table 8.5 .
6 Further details of the 60 films used in this study are given in Appendix 2 .
7 The E.coli strains and plasmids used in this study are described in Table 1 .
8 The reference values for our laboratory for blood lipid values used in this study are shown in Table II and were taken from the American based Lipid Research Clinics .
9 Many of the details of this study are reported in Willman and Winch , with Francis and Snell ( 1984 ) , and we describe in some detail the way in which the company introduced this technology in Chapter 9 .
10 When indifference as to terminology is a recurrent feature in the work of only one jurist , and when 80 per cent of all instances of this indifference are found in his work , there is considerable difficulty in supposing that a general rapprochement between legacy and trust had taken place .
11 Some details of the 24 stimuli used in this experiment are given in Table 7.1 .
12 The characteristics of the 24 stimuli that were chosen for this experiment are described in greater detail in Chapter 7 .
13 Examples of the use of this theorem are given in 2.2.3 .
14 Many of the factors discussed in this chapter are seen in the information model , and these include interfaces , boundaries , subsystems and the control of resources .
15 The contents of this chapter are summarised in table 6.3 .
16 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 7.2 .
17 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 8.5 .
18 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 9.2 .
19 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 10.5 .
20 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 14.2 .
21 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 15.3 .
22 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 16.8 .
23 The contents of this chapter are summarised in Table 17.4
24 As promised earlier , many of the proofs in this chapter are written in expansive style with square brackets indicating those portions of proofs that could , without great loss , be omitted .
25 The contents of this chapter are summarized in Table 11.3
26 The contents of this chapter are summarized in Table 12.2 .
27 Similarly , the halt and lame , vividly portrayed in Les invalides in book 2 of the same collection ( 1716–17 ) , are surely destined to proceed slowly rather than at the ‘ fast triple time ’ suggested by Geoffrey Chew in the article ‘ Notation ’ ( 111 , 4 ) in New Grove , where the opening bars of this piece are reproduced in facsimile ( xiii , p.376 ) .
28 The details of this programme are covered in greater depth elsewhere in this book .
29 The details of this programme are discussed in 3.3
30 Postwar holiday consumption patterns in Britain indicate the rapid growth of package holidays in the 1950s , but the roots of this boom are located in an earlier period before the Second World War .
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