Example sentences of "[pers pn] see [prep] [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Or , ‘ The Doctor wants I to see about the moss in the tennis court . |
2 | ‘ The company had a very cosy club atmosphere , which I found quite difficult to cope with in terms of what I saw as a lack of professionalism . ’ |
3 | But the only person I saw for the rest of that day , besides the German who brought my food and took me to the lavatory , was the English orderly . |
4 | ‘ You remind me of a medieval fresco I saw on a church in Donegal once . |
5 | She has n't yet been told what I saw on the sonogram by the way . |
6 | A belated attempt at abdomen-straining brought it swimming back into fuzzy focus , but that dial was all I saw during the remainder of an interminable fast-jet loop . |
7 | Later , I saw by a date in a book that she was not yet eighteen . |
8 | ‘ I see beyond the veil of illusion , ’ Chopra said . |
9 | The President accepted his scrap of twisted limb with a gracious smile and said , on Susan 's advice , ‘ I am delighted to receive this gift which I see as a symbol of the cultural and commercial interdependence of the planets . |
10 | I 've started to talk to Alan about what I see as a lack of , of management time erm in this division . |
11 | Referring back to what I see as the purpose behind the whole practice , I have called it ‘ archaeo-astrology ’ . |
12 | It is against this background therefore that I would like to state what I see as the relevance of Christianity to political economy . |
13 | I feel would never wish to give up or reject feminism , which I see as an insistence on putting women first , an insistence on women 's autonomy and I think that the debates with National Liberation struggles , the debate in the Irish National Liberation struggle has seen the two things as going hand in hand . |
14 | Suddenly I see in the calm of the garden a change , as though time has slowed . |
15 | Well let's see you see at the end of the day will probably suit you better er cos she 's quite mature is n't she for her age ? |
16 | What would you see on the floor of the museum in the corner opposite the door ? |
17 | Who do you see as the sort of holding responsibility for training ? |
18 | What do you see as the role of Government in promoting UK exports and how do you feel this compares with the support received by other European businesses ? |
19 | When he came along how could you see things had changed or how could you see in the process of changing ? |
20 | ‘ And what else do you see from the Ridgery besides unicorns ? ’ he asked . |
21 | Owing to what she sees as a lack of gratitude , she threatens to refuse to continue with the caring tasks . |
22 | She is impatient with politics , and with what she sees as the marginalism of the Greens . |
23 | In highlighting what she sees as the essence of the characters , Ms Meckler often misses their comic contradictions and ambiguities . |
24 | Even Baumrind ( 1982 ) , supporting Gilligan 's different voice hypothesis against what she sees as the traditionalism of the psychology of androgyny , holds on to the traditional framework of Jungian psychology in order to do this , and later ( 1986 ) , reinterprets the hypothesis in a humanist and spiritual framework , which is not differentiated by gender . |
25 | During the case of the nine children who were taken into care in February 1991 , one long-standing member of the Panel resigned because of what she saw as the deterioration in the Children 's Panel Hearing system in Orkney since the suspension of Mrs Kemp . |
26 | She saw to the side of one of the houses the faded sign for Morgan and family , boot and shoemakers , fastened over what appeared to be little better than a shed . |
27 | She dimly saw Aunt Emily by the fire and the silver tea service winked on a table beside her , and there , in front of the fire , standing there as comfortably as if it were his own fire , she saw with no surprise at all , that it was Michael Swinton . |
28 | When she arrived at the bus station she saw on the wall behind her bold , splashy writing in foreign characters , Arabic maybe or Urdu , and small , disordered scribbles around the glass faces of the timetables , which , although an irritation , caused Rita no real pain . |
29 | She stared at him a moment , her eyes narrowed slightly , as if she saw through the flesh to the bone itself , and while he met her staring eyes unflinchingly , something in the depths of him squirmed and tried to break away . |
30 | She saw by the look on his face that he was half afraid of her . |