Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [adv] see [pers pn] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ But you 'd better not see him for too long . |
2 | Managers do not really see them as part of the assets of the unit . |
3 | She did n't often see him like that . |
4 | I do n't particularly see it as compromise because for me it is a method of going forward , if you can agree on something which is a basic principled demand around a particular issue and then pull into action a broader range of people around that . ’ |
5 | You do n't normally see it in print , do you . |
6 | I do n't often see her in outdoor clothes — she wore a dark coat and skirt , a shantung blouse and a black straw hat . |
7 | The next customer was a middle-aged man who must have been a regular , for he began by saying , ‘ Do n't often see you on this side , miss . ’ |
8 | Now my view is that I think rather like your comment on Christian doing concerts , Scottish Amicable er Standard Life Scottish Hydro , Scottish Power , Scottish Nuclear I do n't necessarily see it as making influence to make a decision to make a purchase or to recommend a purchase to the third party in another part of Scotland |
9 | ‘ You do n't really see me as a suspect , surely ! ’ |
10 | ‘ I 've only ever seen them from a distance , ’ the old man whispered . |
11 | I had only ever seen them in a tank or on a slab and this was totally different . |
12 | I had not been thinking about him , I had not even seen him for months . |
13 | This prayer alert called several together who had not previously seen it as their responsibility . |
14 | This had covered the blotter so that he had really only seen it for a short time . |
15 | He does n't see us as a part of a crowd , he does n't see us as a number on a computer , he does n't see us as numbers on a bank account , or in some other organizational er er er computer set up or whatever it is , he does n't just see us as that he sees us as individuals . |
16 | To John Baxter this was rather ‘ solemn mock-Soviet montage ’ but others have more rightly seen it as a very effective expression of that energy which ordinary people had in abundance but which the America of 1934 so tragically left untapped . |
17 | ‘ You have n't really seen me for years . ’ |