Example sentences of "chapter [adj] it be [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 In Chapter 2 it was argued that some of the most striking features of the post-war development of the British state , at least until the late 1970s , could be explained quite effectively in terms of ‘ corporate bias ’ , that is moves away from the formal structures of democratic ( electoral ) representation towards the representation of major corporate interest groups ( such as the trade unions and employers ' organizations ) , as mediated through the agency of the state itself .
2 In Chapter 2 it was suggested that task-related information should be regarded as central .
3 In chapter 2 it was suggested that political responses to economic crisis were lagged and variable .
4 In Chapter 7 it was argued that , for index futures , the expected value of the spot price at delivery will exceed the current futures price , that is , there will be a risk premium .
5 In chapter three it was mentioned that the effect of getting large volumes of water mixed up in a volcanic eruption is to make it more violent .
6 In Chapter 4 it was demonstrated that spot and debt can be used to replicate a futures contract .
7 Of course , price subsidies are used for many other purposes ; for example , in chapter 3 it was noted that they might be used to tackle the problem of an externality .
8 In Chapter 3 it was argued that pre-colonial society was indeed authoritarian , and that this expressed itself in a great stress on the conformity of the individual , and on a hierarchy of relationships between young and old , between chiefs and people and between men and women .
9 At the beginning of Chapter 1 it was suggested that linguists and psycholinguists interested in children 's language have addressed two major questions .
10 In Chapter 1 it was suggested that Mean Length of Utterance ( MLU ) measured in morphemes provides a useful summary of the normal child 's mastery of grammatical structure .
11 In Chapter 1 it was suggested that Beccaria may have felt inhibited in including economic and social conditions in his programme because of their dangerous political implications .
12 In Chapter Two it was noted that although presidents face many difficulties in imposing their will on the American political system their chances of doing so are rather greater in foreign and defence policy than in domestic affairs .
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