Example sentences of "[noun] see [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ I will want Parliament to see the report the Government has got .
2 ‘ We have a real chance in the lifetime of the next parliament to see an end to the hunting of live animals with dogs for fun . ’
3 And we then took the Housing Committee down to Lambeth to see the benefits of what they had done .
4 The Electrophone did not diminish box office receipts — on the contrary it tempted subscribers to flock to the West End to see the ‘ real thing ’ .
5 Britannia said he had asked for permission to see the flight deck and apparently made the threat while casually chatting to the captain .
6 Motorists with private transport who have come over the Klausen Pass road may wish to return by the same route to see the opposite angles of view .
7 After the successful tour of Japan and the trip on the Trans Siberian Express across Russia , stopping off in Moscow to see the May Day Parade , Bowie travelled overland to Paris and met up with Angie .
8 Where this is not feasible , it may at least be possible to arrange for the experts to see the child together .
9 Although the confusion of shifts in allegiance within the various loyalist groupings made it difficult for contemporaries to see the underlying direction of change , with hindsight we can see a simplification of unionist politics .
10 To travel for miles along a country lane seeing no traffic other than a solitary tractor is rare in England generally but usual in this vicinity .
11 She has recently returned from a journey in Romania to see the conditions of at least 1,000 children under the age of one , who had contracted AIDS through injections with dirty needles or contaminated blood .
12 And then he used to have the bus on from here to Holyhead to see the other people in Holyhead .
13 Walk along the landscaped towpath to see the seven locks , two aqueducts , four bridges and canal basins at Aberdulais and Resolven .
14 Helping the sufferer to see the pattern of previous illness and the principles of future recovery .
15 Huge crowds flock from East and West to see the second half of the artist 's career
16 In order to get a message to the President , without anyone in the Government or the Pentagon seeing the message before the President , he elected to bypass the Pentagon and all the standard avenues of communication .
17 With comfortable rooms and a good choice of relaxing venues within the hotel including Charley 's Restaurant , this is an ideal base to see the city .
18 These repairs were all done on the progressive system , one man and an apprentice seeing the job through , from stripping to the completed repair .
19 ‘ I do n't need to be Plato to see the obvious , ’ he said coldly .
20 As regards degree courses themselves , some are broader than others , and in effect provide a foundation for subsequent specialized postgraduate education or training ; indeed , it may be more accurate in some cases to see the whole process as a four-year not three-year one , consisting of three foundation years followed by a specialized professional post-graduate year .
21 You do n't have to be an anthropological genius to see a spiralling behaviour pattern here .
22 The Prince was in Swindon to see the work of local youngsters taking part in the Duke of Edinburgh 's Award Scheme .
23 The headteacher who is in the playground in the morning to greet children and parents and also there in the afternoon to see the children safely away is in a strong position to encourage casual chatter about learning , teaching and the parents ' perceptions of the school .
24 John Macgill was at Edinburgh 's Dreghorn barracks to see the flags come down .
25 They had seen that the volcano was in eruption even before dropping anchor ; many of them had come up on deck to see the spectacle .
26 Yet if Eyre irritated those who desired no truck with the mystery of things , he revealed an unfashionable — though much admired — willingness to see the best in humanity .
27 A marvellous opportunity to visit a forge that has been in the same family for five generations to see a working blacksmith .
28 They sense they may have the luck to see a teacher break down , actually self-destruct .
29 In Victorian times visitors were taken by wagonette to see the magnificent peat-fuelled flames .
30 ‘ But is n't it the case , ’ I ask him , ‘ that while people are piling into the cinemas to see the worst exports of Hollywood , they are also piling in to see our own films , such as Alan Parker 's The Commitments , which has after all just won the Bafta award for best film . ’
  Next page