Example sentences of "be discussed [prep] the [adj] chapter " in BNC.

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1 Indeed , instead of starting from the misleading contrast between ‘ material ’ and ‘ cultural ’ , we have to define two areas for analysis : first , the relations between these material means and the social forms within which they are used ( this is of course a general problem in social analysis , but the discussion is limited , here , to cultural means and forms ) ; and , second , the relations between these material means and social forms and the specific ( artistic ) forms which are a manifest cultural production ( these will be discussed in the succeeding chapters ) .
2 As a number of alternatives to and criticisms of Saussure 's theory will be discussed in the following chapters , 1 shall only mention here some of its positive implications for the study of literature .
3 Government expenditure also encourages consumption and hence economic growth even though they may also have detrimental effects if they exceed certain high levels — a claim that will be discussed in the following chapter .
4 As will be discussed in the following chapter there is evidence that in some circumstances arousal may in fact impair or systematically bias memory .
5 ( Protection is not its only value , of course — others will be discussed in the final chapter ) .
6 The events in Beijing during early June 1989 may have changed this situation in a number of important ways , as will be discussed in the final chapter .
7 Moreover , the bare facts about costs , cuts and cash limits need to be seen in the context of the larger ideological debate on the role of welfare which will be discussed in the final chapter on problems of policy in the social services .
8 The relationships between settlement patterns , local land use and communication networks will be discussed in the next chapters .
9 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 .
10 The next layer of the tree integrates major areas like geomancy , which will be discussed in the next chapter .
11 The potential benefits of this will be discussed in the next chapter .
12 After the papal decree of 1099 , which will be discussed in the next chapter , Eadmer tried to suppress the fact of Anselm 's homage .
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 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 .
17 These focal places will be discussed in the next chapter .
18 Arable will be discussed in the next chapter .
19 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 .
20 Some cases will be discussed in the next chapter .
21 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 .
22 An example of a unique sequence , of immense improbability , evolving from a random one in the laboratory will be discussed in the last chapter .
23 These are discussed in the following chapter .
24 Procedural rules which apply to specific applications or orders are discussed in the relevant chapters .
25 Some cases in which progress has been made are discussed in the next chapter .
26 Viruses are more difficult , and are discussed in the next chapter .
27 They are discussed in the next chapter .
28 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 ) .
29 The implications of this for criterion-referencing and graduated tests are discussed in the next chapter .
30 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 .
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