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

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1 We can not do it for ourselves , it is gift and grace — God acting on and in us to create a new willingness to see with his eyes , think with his mind , adopt his values and attitudes ( 1 Cor.
2 It is a bit like using spectacles to see with , and taking them off and looking at them .
3 Although more potent than salbutamol on human airways , salmeterol is a partial agonist achieving about 70% of the maximum effect seen with salbutamol .
4 When the change with salmeterol was above the highest or below the lowest change seen with salbutamol the highest or lowest salbutamol dose was used in the analysis as a censored value .
5 Although this may seem surprising it is similar to some of the dissociation profiles seen with poly(dG-dC) [ 13 ] .
6 She conjured wonderful colourful pictures for a boy to see with his mind 's eye , her voice pure and confident , her memory pouring out hundreds of lines of poetry in a faultless , almost hypnotic flow .
7 In theory the increased prostaglandin synthesis seen with Helicobacter pylori might explain such a reduction in minor mucosal injury .
8 Therefore , the central domain might provide the protein with the ability to form the tetrameric self-aggregate seen with native HeLa TFIIF ( 24 ) .
9 Wordsworth sees with some prescience that political beliefs will be the calls to battle in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries — you might say !
10 Moreover , the inverse intensity of N-Oct 5 bands seen with the different expression constructs argue against the proteolytic processing mechanism but rather for a different transcript structure that affects accessibility of the AUG translation initiation sequences .
11 Breeze saw with surprise that the fierce old man looked almost genial , and actually sported a gardenia in his button-hole .
12 Within a month Wilson saw with her own eyes that she had been right .
13 There was , Anna saw with clarity , no possibility of intimate friendship within the parish , and never would be .
14 Paintings which describe the natural world are indeed easiest for the critic to describe , since any observer can compare an object seen with the same thing depicted .
15 However , unlike the uses seen with have , the to infinitive does not evoke an unrealized objective or goal , but rather an event which is actually accomplished .
16 Many Corydoras seen with damaged , shrunken barbels have suffered because the substrate was not regularly cleaned .
17 The slowest time constant , measured by SDS sequestration , is similar to the slowest dissociation rate seen with DNase I footprinting .
18 He gave Miss Jarman a sideways look which Jess saw with a little skip of interest , thinking — he 's got her measure ; she wo n't fool him .
19 At Sara 's and David 's entrance , the girl stepped back convulsively from the man , and Sara saw with a dull feeling of inevitability that it was Matthew and Sandra .
20 The only thing Isabel saw with any clarity was the startled recognition in fitzAlan 's ice-blue eyes .
21 Peggy saw with some dismay that she wore the distant smile of a woman reviewing her late husband 's insurance position .
22 Influenza B impaired performance of the simple reaction time task by about 20–40% , which is comparable to the 5–10% deterioration seen with alcohol consumption or work at night .
23 He wondered aloud why they had not heard from the officer who had gone to check on the man seen with MacQuillan at the Black Friar .
24 Police never traced a scruffy looking man seen with her the day before she died .
25 Exactly what the squid sees with this strange design of eye is uncertain , but it can undoubtedly perceive great detail in highly reflective surfaces .
26 The ideal tool for making large holes in walls is a core drill , which is rather like a hole saw with tungsten carbide-tipped teeth .
27 These data suggest that a cohort effect may contribute to the pattern of increasing prevalence of H pylori infection seen with increasing age .
28 Moreover , verbs that involve the same primitive automatically have the same case frame , eliminating the duplication of effort seen with the other approaches .
29 The visions which our ancestors saw with the mind 's eye , must be embodied for us in palpable form … all must be made palpable to sight , no less than to feeling . ’
30 It says a lot for our common social perceptions that various observers can agree in their assessments of an individual seen with different people , in different places at different times , but only a detailed inventory , as Robert Cairns and James Green at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , have pointed out , can tell us how actual forms of behaviour are elicited , maintained and organised .
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