Example sentences of "see [prep] [noun sg] 3 " in BNC.

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1 As seen in Fig. 3 b , both proteins have a β -hairpin at the C terminus .
2 As seen in Chapter 3 , this was also true in the nineteenth century , despite lower clergy support particularly for the Fenian movement .
3 However , as we have seen in Chapter 3 , clinical aromatherapy ( without the use of massage ) can work wonders if applied in a holistic rather than a symptomatic way .
4 A talk to probation officers will indirectly reach a section of the community — prisoners — who are not able to come to a bureau and may be seriously in need of a bureau 's services , as was seen in Chapter 3 .
5 The same type of modification is seen on shrews ( it will be seen in Chapter 3 that evidence of digestion occurs earlier on vole teeth than on mice or shrews ) , and flaking and penetration of limb bones is also common ( Fig. 1.13 G-H ) .
6 It will be seen in Chapter 3 that this is very different from the distribution patterns of corrosion produced by digestion .
7 Marx used a numerical model of simple reproduction , which we have seen in Chapter 3 , and suggested that Dept .
8 It is the location of central government , of the headquarters of many major firms , and it is , as will be seen in Chapter 3 , the overwhelmingly dominant centre of banking and finance ; it is the home of ‘ the City ’ .
9 As was seen in Chapter 3 , Moscovici 's theory of social representations also deals with the translation of intellectual notions into common sense .
10 Cain ( 1985 ) argues that it is the unreliability of marriage , no longer , as we have seen in chapter 3 , a contract of total sanctity , which constitutes the economic case for policy interventions to help women in the labour force .
11 As we have seen in Chapter 3 marginal farmers engaged in sheep and beef cattle rearing dominate the upland areas , and many of them are on a ‘ deferred death sentence ’ .
12 There are grounds for suggesting that the market test can produce perverse incentives , as we have seen in Chapter 3 .
13 Since such a pragmatic account is available , as will be seen in Chapter 3 , we can let the semantics just provide a reading compatible with " some and perhaps all " .
14 I use the shotting pattern seen in figure 3 .
15 The explanation is seen in Figure 3 .
16 Furthermore , as seen in Figure 3 , the receiver operating characteristic curve of our model reveals a greater area under the curve than the one of the Pugh score , therefore confering a better specificity and sensitivity to our model .
17 It can be seen from Figure 3 that this is the opposite to myopia .
18 There has been an improvement however , as can be seen from figure 3 , which shows a notable drop in illiteracy levels amongst women between 1970 and 1990 .
19 As can be seen from paragraph 3 of the reports for the hearings in the two cases , the British legislation at issue , dating from 1988 , provides for the establishment of a new register of all British fishing vessels including those registered in the old register maintained under the Merchant Shipping Act 1894 .
20 No changes between groups were seen at day 3 , although levels decreased by about sixfold in all groups between days 3 and 7 ( Fig 7 ) .
21 In fact , as we shall see in Chapter 3 , he was beginning to evolve a new kind of conservative philosophy , and this was in no sense a time-serving decision , so that when Coleridge returned to ‘ orthodox ’ religion , his interpretation of Christian doctrine was strikingly original .
22 As we will see in Chapter 3 , the gap in wages runs parallel to productivity to give the two quite distinct units of production and employment that characterize the Japanese economy .
23 Matthew Arnold , as we shall see in Chapter 3 , regarded English as a vehicle for overcoming class divisions ; in the late Victorian era , it was regarded as a sop to women demanding higher education ( see Baldick 1984 ) .
24 As we shall see in Chapter 3 , this conception of measurement , although originally proposed as an account of scientific measurement in general , bears only a superficial relationship to much of measurement in science which is an activity much more integral to substantive theories than it is in most social research .
25 This type of marking is seen in the contrast of form between the French adjectives in ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) , qualifying a masculine singular noun , and a feminine plural noun , respectively : ( 2 ) j'ai besoin d'un drapeau blanc ( 3 ) ils passèrent deux nuits blanches In English , however , the syntactic realization of this pattern is in a sense the simplest possible : the adjective realizing the P has to be juxtaposed to the noun which is the exponent of E. Ordinary attribution requires this juxtaposition to have the adjective preceding rather than following the noun ( as we shall see in Chapter 3 , there is rather more than one might suspect to be said about postnominal attributive adjectives ) .
26 In the case of genes , we saw in Chapter 3 that co-adapted gene complexes may arise in the gene pool .
27 We saw in Chapter 3 that the law now offers you some protection if there is a ‘ transfer of undertaking ’ , although not if there is a mere sale of shareholding control .
28 As we saw in chapter 3 , logs convert multiplicative processes into additive ones , since log ( ab ) = log ( a ) + log ( b ) .
29 But the laxity with which he argues for its deployment , as we saw in Chapter 3 , gives inherent value a defiantly marshmallow consistency .
30 As we saw in Chapter 3 , the population of the village of Fournou Korifi was probably only 25 or 30 .
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