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The phrase "the opening chapters" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to the initial sections or segments of a book, story, or other written work. Examples: 1. "The opening chapters of the novel were gripping, drawing the reader into the story immediately." 2. "In the opening chapters of the textbook, the author provides a comprehensive overview of the subject matter." 3. "The series finale left many unanswered questions, but the opening chapters of the sequel quickly tied up all loose ends."
Exact(60)
Hints of McFall's post-lapsarian fate snake through the opening chapters.
The opening chapters present empirical arguments for the basic cosmological framework within which Ptolemy worked.
The opening chapters deal with a part of history wholly neglected in Russia.
The suburbs of the 1970s are a vivid presence in the opening chapters of your book.
The opening chapters are largely devoted to Drabble's childhood puzzle-mate, her Auntie Phyl.
It's not that the opening chapters of Loving Day present themselves as strict realism.
Here, the considered pace – which has felt too slow in the opening chapters – really pays off.
The opening chapters of "A Clockwork Orange" still deliver the shock of the new: a red streak of gleeful evil.
The opening chapters of Berry's second novel present four characters related only by their experiences with water.
Personally, after stumbling a few times in the opening chapters, I slipped into the rhythm and stopped noticing.
The prose can be overripe, particularly in the opening chapters, and moments of historical exposition are clumsily inserted.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com