Example sentences of "[adv] be see [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Parler 's influence can especially be seen in the vaulting , most particularly in the stellar designs of the Sacristy and Wenceslaus Chapel .
2 I add my congratulations to my right hon. Friend and his team on what will rightly be seen in the country as an excellent result for Britain and Europe , especially on enlargement .
3 Also , once this perspective is established , any assurance from the other side of real interest in disarmament will naturally be seen as a trick , or at best as a propaganda move .
4 Once mistaken for a joker , he could henceforth be seen as a crank : an important advance in reputation , though this playful and darting mind was seldom so serious as when it was spoofing , or so earnest in intent as when making a joke .
5 They are so small that they can only be seen with a microscope .
6 Towards the end of this phase bronchitis develops , characterised by mucus containing immature lungworms in the airways , which may only be seen with the aid of a low-power microscope , and by cellular infiltration of the epithelium .
7 Today it is possible to experience places and events which even thirty years ago could only be seen on the pages of geography textbooks .
8 Rehearsal time for the cast would be limited , just a few days together in a church hall with sticky tape on the floor and a few odd props to suggest sets that will only be seen on the Friday .
9 Most fungi grow as long thin threads called hyphae — they are so slender that they can only be seen under a microscope , but a mass of intertwined hyphae is visible : this is what makes up toadstools and mushrooms .
10 During autumn he puts out his invisible lines that can only be seen under the microscope of the sun beams , and he is carried into the deep ocean , a balloonist travelling to an unknown destination .
11 The trains , running up and down from London to Stanmore and back , could only be seen through the foliage as a series of silver flashes , but their singing rattle made a constant background music .
12 Although Buckingham was to take possession in most cases only as offices fell vacant , the existence of such a powerful reversionary interest could only be seen as a threat by existing office holders .
13 Although Buckingham was to take possession in most cases only as offices fell vacant , the existence of such a powerful reversionary interest could only be seen as a threat by existing office holders .
14 The five-year-old is un- beaten in six races over hurdles , including one over the course , and his run today can only be seen as a dress rehearsal for the Champion Hurdle next year .
15 The refugee presence in neighbouring countries made the Palestine question highly visible , while from an Arab perspective the creation of Israel could only be seen as a smack in the face of the Arab nation .
16 Lord Osborne told the accused that it was a very serious offence and the happy feature of the case was that the baby had apparently not suffered very much at all in the long term — and this could only be seen as a miracle .
17 Thus recorded crime can only be seen as an indication of criminal activity .
18 Structured systems analysis and design need not only be seen as an alternative to the conventional approach .
19 ‘ We can only be seen from the river , and no one 's likely to be down there at this time of night . ’
20 It can be easily distinguished because the weft strands are left hanging at the back , and the design can only be seen from the front .
21 The election of Tatwine , a priest in the monastery of Breedon on the Hill in the territory of the Middle Angles , to be archbishop of Canterbury on the death of Beorhtwald in early 731 ( HE V , 23 ) , should perhaps be seen as an expression of Aethelbald 's influence , and likewise that of Nothhelm , a priest of London , to Canterbury in 734–5 , and of Cuthbert , probably the former bishop of Hereford , to Canterbury in 740 .
22 It can nevertheless be seen as a kind of charade whereby societies have in the past been held together but which , as a charade , is replaceable by something not involving the pretence element .
23 He will soon be seen as a bartender in the comedy The Linguini Incident and he has a cameo as a FBI agent in David Lynch 's Twin Peaks : Fire Walk With Me .
24 He will soon be seen in the TV police drama Prime Suspect and will also play the tempestuous Heathcliff in a new film of Wuthering Heights .
25 The outcome may thus be seen as a situation in which there is considerable trade-union militancy with respect to wages , hours of work and related issues , but relatively little expression of class consciousness in the broader sense of any profound awareness or conviction of living in a society the nature of which is predominantly determined by class relations , and of being engaged in a continuing struggle to establish an alternative form of society .
26 Although often dismissed as an opponent of evolutionism , Owen can thus be seen as an opponent of Darwinism who was quite happy to accept a theory of evolution based on preordained trends .
27 The famous ceiling , where the wooden angels flew face down through the dusty air above the crowd , was so high it could scarcely be seen in the gloom .
28 All these processes will be helped immeasurably by the imaginative use of computer technology which , like accountancy , will no longer be seen as a service but as an integral part of the whole process .
29 Eventually , the star would be so dim that it could no longer be seen from the spaceship : all that would be left would be a black hole in space .
30 Genuine acceptance of the spirit and implications of Vatican II can probably best be seen in the use of a ‘ people of God ’ ecclesiology , in a stress upon both a working collegiality and the genuine centrality of the Eucharist within the Church , especially the local church , in the warm recognition of the values of pluralism and freedom within and between ‘ particular churches ’ as within human society generally , and in a commitment to work and find Christian holiness within the struggle for justice and peace in solidarity with the poor .
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