Example sentences of "see [prep] [adj] detail " in BNC.

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1 The abundant records and maps of post-medieval and modern times mean that much of the estate structure for these periods can be seen in great detail .
2 and animals to and from markets and fairs can be seen in any detail and some idea obtained of the importance of certain places in the distribution of items across the landscape .
3 Women lived a different cultural , economic , and political life from men in the 1920s , as will be seen in more detail when we return to this area and topic in 1926 .
4 Well I I erm Roy Donson House Builders ' Federation , I I think it will because if you take Hambleton as an example and and and and we 've seen in more detail stage one er more detailed justification for the boundaries of some particular settlements in the Hambleton District Plan er based on a based on a landscape analysis .
5 Such a view reminds us — as we shall see in greater detail in the next chapter — that there is an odd paradox where the ‘ moral ’ qualities of God are concerned .
6 President Nyerere of Tanzania ( as we shall see in greater detail later ) has taken the view that , in a country faced with problems of poverty , ignorance , disease and underdevelopment on a gigantic scale , press freedom should be limited just as it has been in the liberal democracies in wartime .
7 As we shall see in more detail in the next chapter , there are many features of such conditions that make them quite obviously inimical to the creative act .
8 The law recognises that the shareholders ' interest lies ultimately in the value of their shares and not in the business as such , or at least , it recognises that it should be the shareholders who determine the outcome of a bid , and hence ( as we will see in more detail in Chapter 5 ) prohibits certain forms of defensive action on the part of the target company board which could have the effect of depriving the members of an opportunity to dispose of their investment on favourable terms .
9 However , we have already pointed out , by implication , one very important syntactic consequence : only the ascriptive adjectives are eligible to appear predicatively , that is , in a position like that of hungry in : ( 19 ) the antelopes are hungry As was already indicated in Chapter 1 , and as we shall see in more detail in Chapter 3 , predicative position is the surface structure which expresses the intensional relation of assignment , and assignment does require that the property of the adjective should be construed as applied to the entity of the subject noun phrase .
10 So , perhaps the reason is the loss of a love object , and then of course if you found there was a in fact a loss of a love , love object , then you might to see in greater detail , how this whole thing came about .
11 Then you can pick out what you 'd like to see in more detail another time .
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