Example sentences of "he see [adv] " in BNC.

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1 What had he seen here that afterwards had jolted , pricked against his memory ?
2 Similarly , the case of displays or visible representations , the offence is committed if the material is visible to the public generally , but not , apparently , if it can he seen only by persons inside another dwelling .
3 Never before had he seen so many people starving and so many crops dying , their dried remains being simply blown away by the wind .
4 The writer must be universal in sympathy and an outcast by nature : only then can he see clearly .
5 ‘ Did he see where Andrus went ? ’
6 But nor could he see much hope any other way .
7 All of this must be accomplished while the officer continues to do what he sees ultimately as a policing job .
8 He sees clearly how things stand , and the words come to him with which to describe them .
9 He sees instead Japanese women able to ‘ do in Rome as the Romans do ’ , a vital asset in a more multinational Japan .
10 In few places are the results of the explorations of Sweeney Agonistes clearer than in his 1927 attack on Lawrence whom he sees as fatally humourless .
11 He wants the man he sees as responsible for Peggy 's death to suffer as much as possible before he takes Stone out himself .
12 The European Commission did n't prove that helpful either : Hinsley makes no secret of his frustration with the Esprit parallel processing projects , which he sees as obsessed with making Unix parallel — a quest that he sees as fundamentally misguided and doomed to failure in the long term .
13 The European Commission did n't prove that helpful either : Hinsley makes no secret of his frustration with the Esprit parallel processing projects , which he sees as obsessed with making Unix parallel — a quest that he sees as fundamentally misguided and doomed to failure in the long term .
14 The ‘ adaptive ’ function is based on the proposition that what we call crime today includes forms of behaviour that will be crucially necessary to future society — Durkheim 's ( 1938 ) examples , are the ideas of Socrates and liberal philosophy which were once criminalised but which he sees as vital for contemporary society .
15 Olson assigns a key role to interest group leaders , whom he sees as practical entrepreneurial figures , interested in making a success of their group because of the material benefits it will bring .
16 The European Commission did n't prove that helpful either : Hinsley makes no secret of his frustration with the Esprit parallel processing projects , which he sees as obsessed with making Unix parallel — a quest that he sees as fundamentally misguided and doomed to failure in the long term .
17 The European Commission did n't prove that helpful either : Hinsley makes no secret of his frustration with the Esprit parallel processing projects , which he sees as obsessed with making Unix parallel — a quest that he sees as fundamentally misguided and doomed to failure in the long term .
18 It possesses , nevertheless , a striking richness and complexity , demanding to be examined from a variety of viewpoints , notably that of musical production ( in relation to general production in capitalist societies ) , that of musical form ( discussed by Adorno in terms of ‘ standardization ’ ) and that of musical reception and function ( which he sees as almost totally instrumentalized , in the service of the ruling social interests ) .
19 Nigel Barley 's book is partly about being human within an academic context he sees as largely hypocritical about fieldwork .
20 He sees too that the other should from the first have known better , as he himself should ( he has come to understand that in retrospect ) , and therefore judges that they both made not only an unlucky but a bad choice .
21 Yeah , and also he lives so far out and he was saying you know , Julie 's up in er in Birmingham , Andy 's up in Birmingham , he 's had no one to see , Eileen 's come back up to Birmingham he sees quite a lot of and er I think he 's just a bit lonely .
22 He says he might have been a clerk or a waiter if he had gone ; he sees very clearly how circumstances makes lives .
23 But Jesus sees right into him , and he sees perhaps , needs that Nicodemus himself is not even aware of .
24 And , in a few weeks when he sees how business is going , he will make the decision as to whether to confirm you in the part or to recast . ’
25 He always thought of it as some kind of converted dungeon , but he sees now , with a wry smile , that it 's really just an ordinary suburban house .
26 He saw ahead and to their left a wedge of earth fallen from the bank .
27 The smell of incense strengthened and he saw ahead a haze of gold where the gleaming mosaics of the apse stained the air and the great figure of Christ in glory , his wounded hands stretched out , glared down the nave with cavernous eyes .
28 As Lexandro looked through a quatrefoil window in the observatorium of the corvette , what he saw ahead , moving seemingly slowly across the void-gulf far from any suns , more isolated than loneliness itself , was a great glittering leviathan that seemed carved intricately of ice , with fins and ribbed wings and soaring towers whose pinnacles were linked by flying buttresses .
29 He saw ahead of him the bowed back of Byrkin , hunched head in hands with an empty bowl in front of him on the table .
30 He quickened his flight as he saw ahead in the far distance , perhaps twenty miles on , the blue rising of real hills — ground higher than any he had seen so far .
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