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

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1 ‘ The way we see marriage has changed .
2 This will become more important as we see changes in the National Health Service .
3 By contrast , we see Tradescant lying on his newly sheeted bed , washed and with beard neatly trimmed , wearing a superfine linen shroud of the highest quality , the top-knot having now become nothing more than a small tassel attached to the linen itself .
4 We see DEC 's Alpha chip as the choice for the next generation of computers , ’ Kubota said , suggesting that the expanded agreement with DEC will be completed later on this month .
5 The following day , Darwin made the first evolutionary entry in his current pocket notebook ( known as the ‘ Red Notebook ’ ) : ‘ When we see Avestruz two species .
6 We we see Jim , we decide amongst ourselves whether we have the need , and I think I mean I I believe we do anyhow .
7 We see horror now .
8 Naturalism as an aesthetic may work as a tool of catharsis — we may suffer with those we see suffering — but it does not illuminate methods for action after the catharsis .
9 To some extent we see members of this group as ‘ failures ’ in the career development process .
10 When we see Grandcourt at breakfast there with Mr Lush , the scene is suggestively rendered as a ‘ still-life ’ , artfully composed but with no vital principle , the room ‘ seeming the stiller for its sober antiquated elegance , as if it kept a conscious , well-bred silence ’ .
11 In His account of what happened to the rich man and Lazarus after they died ( Luke 16 verses 19/31 ) Jesus quoted the words spoken to the rich man in hell , by Abraham and in verses 29 and 31 we see Abraham referring to Moses and The Prophets and clearly he is speaking specifically of the scriptures attributed to them .
12 Here , as in other areas , we see ecology emerging from a deliberate revolt against the evolutionary morphology of earlier decades .
13 ‘ In the real democracy which we inhabit in the United Kingdom ’ , we see things differently , as British Sources are wont to put it .
14 Berkeley sees that , to his identification of mental ideas with real things , ‘ it will be objected that we see things actually without or at a distance from us , and which consequently do not exist in the mind ’ .
15 The point that in dreams we see things ‘ as existing at a great distance ’ indicates that this objection can be answered , but he acknowledges that some explanation is needed .
16 We see things within the context of what we are subconsciously programmed to see , through glasses tinted strongly with the colour of our inward , unconscious mind .
17 If events contradict the way we see things , we may either turn a blind eye or resist hotly .
18 This exercise shows that the way in which we view the world is completely a question of how we see things and where we 're coming from .
19 At Itel , we see things a little differently from ‘ catch the wave ’ investors .
20 THE WAY WE SEE THINGS
21 Many of our learned perspectives , the way we see things , can have a negative effect ; attitudes , preferences and prejudices all play their part in the conflict process .
22 The way we see things is our window on the world .
23 Attitudes represent the way we see things ; preferences the way we like things to be ; prejudices the way we potentially distort what we see .
24 As we have already discovered , many of the problems we face are related to the way we see things , our world view .
25 Nature has seen to it that for the most part we see things as they are , and so have little occasion to say , ‘ It appears to be … . ’
26 We see things differently over there , you understand .
27 I 've told you before , we see things differently over here .
28 Now we 've got very much a personal perspective and we see things through our own eyes so somebody may see somebody behaving and regard that as an assertive behaviour , somebody else may actually see that as aggressive it 's very much a personal view of actually where we see the people lying and also indeed the people who prefer to deal with them .
29 And also we see Oxford .
30 Now we see management very much as business management , rather than functional management . ’
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