Example sentences of "still see [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | They say you can still see a gap in the treeline where the Hurricane shaved the tops off what would then have been saplings . |
2 | Even when a playwright has been drafted in , you can still see the joins . |
3 | She could still see the tableau this morning : her father with tears of pride in his eyes — she knew he would go to the business and bore everyone to death with tales about how his wonderful daughter was going to university . |
4 | I would have to go as fast as I could while I could still see the way , and then rest for longer , and then probably crawl . |
5 | Continue on to Noar Hill Hanger where you can still see the evidence of prehistoric field systems . |
6 | You can still see the algae in the water , and I am still drinking bottled . |
7 | You can still see the flames coming . |
8 | Jezrael could still see the lights of sunflowers strung out like mercury on rose satin . |
9 | Although it was dark , I could still see the stone wall at the edge of the road . |
10 | Non-train ticket holders can still see the road traction engine display at Swanage at £1 for adults and just 50 pence for children . |
11 | I can still see the looks of astonishment on his friends ’ faces when they saw me , a white man , drinking out of the same glass . ’ |
12 | Inside , one can still see the Map Room , where Churchill used to study the progress of the war , the Cabinet Room where many of the Second World War 's most important decisions were made , and Churchill 's personal accommodation from which he made several of his wartime broadcasts . |
13 | You can still see the holes on either side of the pulpit . |
14 | The men of the Somerset Levels paid a tithe called ‘ moor-penny ’ ; their cattle suffered from a disease called ‘ moor-evil ’ ; and in every pond and damp corner you will still see the jerking movements of the moorhen . |
15 | If you make a codicil leaving somebody out , they 'll still see the original will somebody will know that you 've changed your mind . |
16 | She closed her eyes , but could still see the building . |
17 | She was an anchoress , one of the many recluses of the period who shut herself away from the world to pray in solitude : we can still see the foundations of her anchorage next to the church which is now called St Julian 's in Norwich . |
18 | ‘ Look , ’ he said , pointing to some darker smudges of rust , ‘ you can still see the bloodstains here , and here . ’ |
19 | Even today you can still see the trapdoor leading to the cellar . |
20 | He did this by bringing a camera up to his face , through which he could nevertheless still see the tiger 's actions . |
21 | It ke Yeah we can still see the telly . |
22 | Two hundred years after the Declaration of the Rights of Man took place in France , 200 years after that historic announcement of tolerance and emancipation , we can still see the practice of the most odious and cruel despotism by a man who is the execration of humankind , who is directly and personally responsible for crimes against humanity , and crimes against justice . |
23 | The main light was behind him , but I could still see the shadows on his face ; they were more marked than ever , and I had the foolish illusion that I could remove them by stroking them with the tips of my fingers . |
24 | Made some more bets that did n't quite work out , but I could still see the pattern — a good one , too . |
25 | Years later , on my last visit to that pioneering control-room , I could still see the marks on the wall where our preliminary broadcast signals were given . |
26 | Nearby , alum has been worked for centuries and we could still see the remains of the old landing stage where little coasters brought brimming vats of urine from London , which was mixed with the local mineral to produce dyestuff fasteners for textiles . |
27 | Visitors to the sites of lake dwellings on Lake Ledro — to the west of the northern tip of Lake Garda — and Lake Varese can still see the remains of the wooden stake piles on which the lake villages were set . |
28 | The emperor Henry VII granted Steckborn its charter in 1313 , and you can still see the remains of the old town walls . |
29 | Let's not forget that even if no more children 's books were published at all , each year would still see the arrival of a new cohort of children and their parents and grandparents , who for the first time start to contemplate buying books which are relevant for a child of that age . |
30 | So from that biblical scores have concluded , the book that we know as Genesis was originally two accounts that were pushed together but not very expert actually , because you can still see the join , an and Freud 's view about the Moses there are numerous discrepancies and numerous joins and if you take it all apart and say what is it , what does it make up , his conclusion is that erm Moses was , was not Egyptian , sorry Moses was not er erm no not , not a Hebrew but Egyptian . |