Example sentences of "see [prep] [noun sg] 6 " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Haemobilia after puncture of the biliary tree was seen in patient 6 and settled with conservative management .
2 It is difficult to imagine the mosaicist responsible for the cantharus in mosaic B working with such conventional geometries as are seen in mosaic 6 and the mosaic from insula 34 .
3 Uniqueness is typically assumed , but is by no means guaranteed , as we have seen in Lecture 6 .
4 Private journals continued to burgeon , as will be seen in Chapter 6 , but the state press could henceforth stand better on its own feet financially .
5 The fact that both these forms of aphasia are frequently observed suggests that there are separate systems for perceiving and producing speech ; and we have already seen in Chapter 6 that research on normal subjects suggests the same conclusion .
6 As will be seen in Chapter 6 , however , some of these isolates have been responsible for many of the revolutionary advances in scientific knowledge .
7 Again there is a significant interaction , as seen in Table 6 and Figure 2 , between the levels of processing variable and type of response variable .
8 Occasionally the same design could serve both purposes , as can be seen in Figure 6 where the single version is intended for a retired couple , the double for two families of labourers .
9 As can be seen from Table 6 , there is a significant main effect for level of processing for the recognition scores .
10 They can be seen at No. 6 Via Guastella , a street named after the college rather than the other way around .
11 As we shall see in Chapter 6 the closing decades of the century and the early years of the new century were more concerned with the ‘ collective ’ approach than the individual , and younger ministers were only mirroring this change .
12 An ambitious theory of rational choice , coupled with Game Theory , can attempt to account for rules , practices , and institutions , as we shall see in Chapter 6 .
13 As we shall see in Chapter 6 , much conformity may be explained by powerlessness in the face of social circumstances , where the actors recognise their inability to change things , and so resign themselves to making the best of it .
14 But as we shall see in Chapter 6 more flexible planning policies are required if the low-wage rural economy is to be alleviated and rural depopulation to be assuaged in those areas where it remains a problem .
15 As we shall see in Chapter 6 , trading in existing stocks helps to maintain their liquidity , makes them attractive to savers and thereby lowers the cost to borrowers of raising new capital in this way .
16 Firms may , as a rule , prefer to raise ‘ capital ’ by issuing long-term bonds but , as we shall see in Chapter 6 , there may be circumstances where it is preferable to raise short-term ‘ money ’ instead .
17 We shall see in Chapter 6 how such arguments can sometimes help in the assignment of electronic transitions .
18 This is in fact the implicit approach of some observational methods as we shall see in Chapter 6 .
19 The document was accepted and ratified by the landlord , as one can see from paragraph 6 of the reply which states :
20 We saw in Chapter 6 that fixed-term contracts offer one , strictly limited , means of contracting out of statutory rights .
21 We saw in Chapter 6 how Marxists argue that military spending is one solution to under-consumption ; at the same time Marxists would also argue that Keynesian demand management and social welfarism is another instrument for creating higher effective consumer demand , which also serves to create further false consciousness among the working class and defuse threats to the legitimacy of the state .
22 As we saw in Lecture 6 , distortions may lead the ranking of sectors according to physical capital intensity ( A* ) to differ from that according to factor shares ( ) .
  Next page