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Example sentences for "previous chapter"

  • Some of these circular mounds, as we have seen in a previous chapter, were ascended by spiral pathways, winding round them, as round a shaft, from base to summit.

  • The skill, which the illustrations of a previous chapter convince us the mound-builders possessed in selecting and fortifying their military positions, is in no degree displayed in this instance.

  • It has already been noted at the end of a previous chapter that on closing the magnetic iron-ore concentrating plant at Edison, New Jersey, he resolved to work on a new type of storage battery.

  • It was but a short time thereafter that he solved the knotty problem by an invention mentioned in a previous chapter.

  • It was the beginning of the festival of Bairam, the great Mohammedan period of rejoicing which marks the end of the fast of Ramadam, mentioned in a previous chapter.

  • As suggested in a previous chapter, during this and the following year each child should be encouraged or required to learn a poem or a story of his own choosing, which he presents to the class.

  • In a previous chapter I have spoken of dancing as a method of motion to accompany spoken verse, as a means of deepening the sense of rhythm.

  • The different periods in the architectural history of the city have been defined in a previous chapter.

  • The most important fragment is the head of Jupiter, discussed in a previous chapter (Fig.

  • Reference has been made in a previous chapter to the liberality with which Shelley, by his will, provided for the charming and vivacious Claire, in whose brilliant endowments he delighted, whilst pitying her for her misfortunes.

  • In connection with Shelley's last visit to his home a few words may be here said more appropriately than they would have been said in a previous chapter.

  • The preparation and properties of methane and acetylene have been discussed in a previous chapter.

  • The relation of carbon dioxide to plant life has been discussed in a previous chapter.

  • As explained in a previous chapter, when ammonia is passed into water the two compounds combine to form the base NH{4}OH, known as ammonium hydroxide.

  • This line was equipped with what was known in those days as magneto-transmitters, such as we have described in a previous chapter on the subject of telephony.

  • If we open the key the current will cease and the magnetism will vanish--that is to say, the molecules will turn back to their neutral position by their own attractions, as has been described in a previous chapter.

  • Near this bridge a county road leads to Taylorstown, celebrated in recent years for its oil developments, and in this vicinity reside James Noble and John Thompson, two old wagoners of the road, mentioned in a previous chapter.

  • Monroe and Uniontown, and the intervening space of two miles between these points, are covered in a previous chapter.

  • The vicissitudes attending the construction of this bridge have been alluded to in a previous chapter.

  • The road when first laid out, as seen in a previous chapter, passed over Wills Mountain.

  • The reasons for this change were fully set forth in a previous chapter.

  • The increase of bank forgeries, and its cause, I referred to in a previous chapter.

  • The old press yard has been fully described in a previous chapter.

  • In a previous chapter we have mentioned a hunt during which the otter crossed a watershed, and this brings to mind a seven and a half hours' hunt by the K.

  • We have, in a previous chapter, told of an otter which travelled ten miles overland from one stream to another, going straight to the various smoots through the walls which barred its passage.

  • In a previous chapter we have made brief mention of otter-hunting dress.

  • In a previous chapter on finance were set forth the dangers attendant upon the indiscriminate borrowing of money.

  • We have, as I indicated in a previous chapter, been working toward this combination of farm and factory and with entirely satisfactory results.

  • In a previous chapter I have set out how experiments in our shops have demonstrated that in sufficiently subdivided industry there are places which can be filled by the maimed, the halt, and the blind.

  • In a previous chapter I noted that no one applying for work is refused on account of physical condition.

  • In a previous chapter I have spoken of the Parcel Post Act of 1882, and mentioned the share of the receipts apportioned to the railway companies of the United Kingdom.

  • Of the railway mania period I have spoken in a previous chapter.

  • John Young, who put in my way my first arbitration case, to which I have in a previous chapter alluded.

  • The third mode of worship has been already mentioned in a previous chapter, viz.

  • It is clear that these, as explained in a previous chapter, are names of spirits, but the same names (as in the case of other fetich mixtures) are given to the medicines in whose preparation they are invoked.

  • Such a being, as mentioned in a previous chapter, was called "Uvengwa.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "previous chapter" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    boiling salted; deep waters; eldest brother; five oceans; later date; live happily; next went; plus repeaters; previous chapter; previous chapters; previous condition; previous engagement; previous page; previous state; previous years; previously described; previously elected; previously explained; previously noted; previously remarked; previously stated; primary assembly; single block; small garrison; stock company; take command