Example sentences of "see for example " in BNC.

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1 Such a view of ‘ sociology ’ sets up another binary derived from the police preference for a Manichaean world created on homologies of ‘ good — evil ’ , and further reflects the ferocious resistance to and fear of change which permeates the organization ( see for example Weatheritt 1986 , Butler 1984 , and Adams 1988 ) .
2 Many of the Muslim women I spoke to told me that their husbands were unfaithful to them usually with white women ( see for example p. 123 of ‘ Sisters in Struggle ’ ) .
3 In the biblical narratives they appear as singers and dancers ( see for example , Exod.
4 The question must arise again now , if only because people have suggested that in order to improve the education of our children we need to move back to some system of selection ( see for example Whose Schools ?
5 Although the overall prevalence of moderate to severe dementia for those aged 65 and over in Britain can not be stated with accuracy ( because the several studies conducted in this country took place in different locations , at different times , with different types of sample , and using different measures and methods of assessment of dementia ; see for example Akhtar AM et al , 1973 ; Clarke et al , 1984 and ; 1986 ; Bergmann , 1971 ; Bond & Carstairs , 1982 ; Gruer , 1975 ; Gurland et al , 1983 ; Kay et al , 1964 & 1970 ; Maule et al , 1984 ; Williamson et al , l964 ) , it can be estimated as somewhere between one per cent and seven per cent of those aged 65 and over .
6 What is sure , however , is that prevalence rises markedly with age ( see for example Kay et al , 1970 ; Campbell et al , 1983 ; Maule et al , 1984 ) , and may affect as many as 20 per cent of people over the age of 80 .
7 But it is important to state that although in recent years in Britain , there have been many service innovations whose aim has been to improve the home or community care of elderly mentally frail people ( see for example Age Concern England , l983 ) , unfortunately most of these schemes have either not been systematically evaluated ( often because they have been very small in scale ) , or — if they have — results have not been widely disseminated .
8 Not surprisingly research has suggested a complexity of factors , and shown therefore the difficulties facing any attempts at alleviation ( see for example Eagles et al , l987 ; Gilleard et al , l984 ; Gilhooly , 1984 ; Zarit et al , l980 ) .
9 Other frequently reiterated problems with community service provision are the absence of effective collaboration between the different service agencies ( see Wright et al , 1988 ) , and the related fact that services tend to be delivered in a piecemeal and fragmented way without coordination at service delivery level ( see for example Challis and Davies , 1980 ) .
10 For some purposes the action project in operation can best be described directly by the development officers and their support workers ( see for example Murphy and Rapley , 1986 ) .
11 It is well known that the majority of dementia sufferers living at home receive the main part of their care from family , friends and neighbours ( see for example Bergmann , 1978 ; Levin et al , 1983 ) .
12 The principal carers were , as other studies testify ( see for example Charlesworth et al , 1984 ) mainly women ( 67 per cent ) and mainly married ( 75 per cent ) .
13 In fact it has been known since the late 1950s ( see for example Nature , vol. 208 , p 423 ) that Po is widely distributed in the environment , and in man , as a result of atmospheric fall-out of the decay products of natural radon-222 , with an abundance in northern temperate latitudes of about 0.06 curie per sq.km or of the order of 10 6 curies in total over the surface of the world land mass .
14 Wordsworth 's other poetic children may be compared — see for example The Idiot Boy , Lucy Gray , and We Are Seven .
15 Although doubt has been cast on that finding by the results of the national survey ( see Parker 1982 : 90 ) , McGoldrick and Cooper 's research was conducted after the national survey and it has helped to encourage a view that attitudes towards early retirement are changing significantly and that it is being regarded more and more favourably by older workers ( see for example , House of Commons Select Committee on Social Services 1982 ) .
16 Afro-Caribbean and Asian children are indeed painfully aware that many teachers view them negatively and some studies have documented reports of routine racist remarks by teachers ( see for example Wright in this volume ) .
17 Parents give to their children , and continue to give more than their children ever give them in most cases , although one situation in which this flow often is reversed is where children have migrated to a more affluent country , and expect to send money back to their parents ( see for example , Thorogood , 1987 ) .
18 It seems that it is of continuing importance for women to be able to call upon relatives to assist them with child care , and that this still is a key element in women 's organization of their daily lives , as it has been in the past ( see for example Roberts , 1984 ) .
19 The importance of NO 2 in the Antarctic stratosphere stems from its influence on the partitioning of chlorine between the reactive form , ClO , and the less reactive form , chlorine nitrate , ClONO 2 ( see for example ref. 7 ) :
20 But however we resolve the problem we must never cut across the basic teaching of other scriptures , that one man 's disobedience plunged the whole human race into sin , subjecting us all to death ( see for example Romans 5:12ff . ) .
21 This concept is rather vague because it can be shown that a computer with a very basic instruction set can simulate a Turing machine and therefore can , in theory , perform any " computable " task , so that such a computer is ( again in theory ) completely general-purpose ( see for example Minsky 1967 ) .
22 This does not preclude the theoretical possibility of implementation in other technologies , such as fluidics ( see for example Gluskin , Jacoby , and Reader 1964 ) , although historically this has not been the case .
23 Recently such minicomputers have become more similar to computers in the mainstream , with extensive data-types and with larger addressing ranges , and are entering the fields of more conventional scientific and business computing ( see for example the early DEC PDP-8 , and the more recent PDP-11 , Data General Nova , and GEC 4000 series ) .
24 It will be seen that extra instructions are now required to load and store the MQ register , either directly from or to a store location , or via the accumulator ; see for example instructions 9 and 10 on the Von Neumann computer ( Figure 1.5 ) .
25 A common technique ( see for example the University of Manchester MU5 and ICL 2900 range , and many microprocessors ) is to allow any contiguous block of store locations to hold a stack , and for a special processor register , the stack pointer , to hold the address of the location currently containing the top element of the stack .
26 In the future much of a computer 's Supervisor may be in microcode : see for example the microprogrammed operating system functions on the experimental VENUS System ( Liskov 1972 ) .
27 There is little doubt that there is some truth in this story , but more recently it has been recognized ( see for example , Jensen and Meckling , 1976 ) that modelling the behaviour of the chief executive without thought as to the behaviour of other actors in the firm is naive .
28 More thorough critical exercises have been effectively conducted by others ( see for example Dowling and Noss ( 1990 ) on the Mathematics curriculum ) .
29 Several examples of subdividing statements of attainment have appeared ( see for example Archer 1989 , Miller and Portsmouth 1990 ) .
30 As for my own research , there are some areas of it in which quantification has not been used because in these areas it was not necessary or appropriate for the purpose I had in mind ( see for example the discussions in chapter 5 ) .
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