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Discover LudwigThe phrase "chapters 1 and 2" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It can be used to refer to specific chapters in a book, novel, or any written work that is divided into chapters. Example: "I just finished reading chapters 1 and 2 of the novel and I'm already hooked on the story." In this example, the speaker is referring to the first and second chapters of a specific novel they have been reading.
Exact(27)
I Kings (chapters 1 and 2) continues the story of David and the struggle for the succession of his throne.
Exarchopoulos who plays the title character (the French title translates to "The Life of Adèle, Chapters 1 and 2")—later addressed the excessive attention paid to the twenty minutes of sex in the three-hour movie: I understand it.
Exarchopoulos — who plays the title character (the French title translates to "The Life of Adèle, Chapters 1 and 2") — later addressed the excessive attention paid to the twenty minutes of sex in the three-hour movie: I understand it.
In the Old Testament, Satan is viewed as the prosecutor of Yahweh's court, as in Job, chapters 1 and 2, but he is not regarded as an adversary of God.
Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Spoken Word EUGENE ONEGIN: A NOVEL IN VERSE, a reading from Chapters 1 and 2 of the Pushkin novel by the actress Marian Seldes, Friday at 12 30 p.m. at St .Peter's Church, Lexington Avenue at 54th Street.
II Samuel, chapters 9 through 20, verse 22 together with I Kings, chapters 1 and 2, the so-called Succession History, or the Family History of David, which, according to many scholars, forms the oldest section of historiography in Scripture contains accounts of the domestic problems of David's reign.
Similar(32)
Those are Chapters 1 and 2. Coming chapters will be about other actors responding to business initiatives.
See also Shope 1983 and Steup 1996, chapters 1 and 2. For an altogether different approach to the analysis of knowledge, see Williamson 2000.
Accordingly, there are a number of monographs and papers covering a wide spectrum of notions of almost periodicity and applications (see, for instance, the large list of references [14, Chapters 1 and 2]).
Again PA I, and especially chapters 1 and 5, appears designed to provide that guidance.
(For a contemporary defense of this point, see Strandberg (2011), especially Chapters 1 and 4).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com