Example sentences of "[prep] be seen in [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 A number of very different trends were to be seen in a sample of frequencies on bus routes , ranging from consistent decline over the period since 1939 to slight increase in recent years on a few routes .
2 She did intend to join a nearby sports club , where she could swim regularly , as soon as she was slim , but meanwhile shyly admitted to feeling too embarrassed to be seen in a swimsuit .
3 In the end Seth killed Apophis , whose blood was thought to be seen in the red or pink tint of the morning and evening sky .
4 In this in-situ collapse/consolidation test , water is added to the sample under constant load , and the deformation is read from the dial gauges to be seen in the middle of the picture .
5 A minute representation of the world 's 30,000 or so species of fish is to be seen in the aquarium .
6 Three significant things are to be seen in the story .
7 David attempted to reassure him , and after he 'd arranged for him to be seen in the casualty department of the local eye unit he asked the factory welfare officer , Louise Raymond , to take him over .
8 The same intensity of punctilio was to be seen in the treatment of foreign diplomats in Russia .
9 He had sent one first as a test , for sometimes it does n't do the doors a lot of good , and you find you 've wood of a variety of types and colour — indicating the door was never meant to be seen in the raw .
10 The psychological and moral elements of political action were almost the only ones to appear here , which is why intellectuals least inclined to politics were to be seen in the Resistance .
11 There was n't a star to be seen in the sky .
12 BR 's 1973 ‘ Interim Rail Strategy ’ , which had initially received government approval , had proposed a doubling of the rate of investment up to 1981 , and its impact was to be seen in the rise in staff numbers by nearly 6,000 during 1974–5 , after years of virtually continuous decline .
13 Perhaps one of the most symbolic images of the Somoza regime is still to be seen in the capital , Managua , today .
14 The Khalili collection would therefore not be adding to the range of art to be seen in the capital .
15 The Berlin Wall came to be seen in the West as a symbol of the oppression of Communism , the most visible example of the ‘ Iron Curtain' .
16 Citizens of Birmingham are treated to some of the finest displays of the North American golden rod to be seen in the country .
17 Grunte is rarely to be seen in the constituency and even more rarely in the House of Commons .
18 There was very little of his own faith to be seen in the city , even if he had wished to become involved .
19 The borders are elaborate — comprising bands of chain-guilloche , wave-crest pattern , and simple guilloche ( all of which are to be seen in the Lion and Stag pavement ) .
20 His tombstone , decorated on the back with two tups ' horns and two horn spoons , is still to be seen in the kirkyard .
21 The physical mark of this is to be seen in the indentation between the upper lip and the nose .
22 He said it had to be seen in the context of the UK 's £25billion a year deficit on trade in manufactured goods , a 22 per cent fall in enrolment for engineering courses since 1985 and the forecast decrease in the number of 16- to 24-year-olds by the mid-1990's .
23 He said it had to be seen in the context of the UK 's £25billion a year deficit on trade in manufactured goods , a 22 per cent fall in enrolment for engineering courses since 1985 and the forecast decrease in the number of 16- to 24-year-olds by the mid-1990's .
24 Those general truths need to be seen in the context of this particular bid .
25 A spokesman said the top salaries had to be seen in the context of the company 's performance last year and its importance as a global business .
26 In order to understand Conductive Education it has to be seen in the context of the Hungarian State System .
27 The issues discussed in this chapter have to be seen in the context of a workforce which is itself growing older .
28 These figures also have to be seen in the context of a rapid rise in demand and enrolments , despite the fact that black education is neither free nor compulsory , and expenditure is not keeping up with need .
29 This emphasis on discipline , has to be seen in the context of the specific nature of the social critique of youth , and of working-class life in general , which focused on notions of chaos , irrationality , spontaneity , and so on .
30 Though these accident reductions are to be welcomed , they have to be seen in the context of what could have been achieved using alternative approaches , such as those used in Buxtehude or Berlin-Moabit .
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