Example sentences of "see [noun] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | You do n't see ducks with a bow-tie on . |
2 | Unlike them , Mary Queen of Scots did not see complexities in the situation ; like her grandson Charles I after her , she assumed that the expression of the royal will from a distance was enough to make problems go away . |
3 | I could now see Malc on the front row quite clearly . |
4 | It was agreed that they would not see Minton for a while . |
5 | Viewers can also see Birds of a Feather , Last of the Summer Wine and Jasper Carrot . |
6 | AS YOU CAN SEE CLUBS THROUGHOUT THE U.K. ARE CHOOSING FASTRAX FOR QUALITY CLUB VESTS . |
7 | Just under the surface , though , we can see signs of a willingness to take nothing on trust , to maintain a permanent self-vigilance , and if necessary to overturn the cultural idols . |
8 | If I am lucky , and the weather is compatible with fish-spotting , I should see signs of the carp when they push through weedbeds and hump through the surface , or mudclouds and bubbles when they root in the bottom . |
9 | Although it was neglected , you could see signs of the initial planning , such as a rock garden which was completely overgrown . ’ |
10 | As we stroll through the mall we can see signs of the opposite problem . |
11 | Follow that long dual carriageway and you 'll see signs for the turnoff . |
12 | A utilitarian who holds this ‘ attitudinist ’ view will see utilitarianism as the expression of a fundamental attitude in favour of a certain way of reaching decisions . |
13 | His eyes opened wide , and suddenly he could see Kirov in a new light . |
14 | In the longer term self-help groups may emerge , where librarians can pool views about recent publications , or library suppliers may see openings for a more active approach . |
15 | First , we will see prayer as a natural way of talking with God . |
16 | Doyle could see bruises on the man 's neck . |
17 | Throughout Anne 's reign we can see splits amongst the Tories , for example , with regard to their attitude towards occasional conformity . |
18 | On-screen editing facilities include a zoom mode , so that the user can see part of a mind map in more detail , a colour palette so that the colour of branches and text can be altered , and cut and paste options to allow branches to be moved around . |
19 | On-screen editing facilities include a zoom mode , so that the user can see part of a mind map in more detail , a colour palette so that the colour of branches and text can be altered , and cut and paste options to allow branches to be moved around . |
20 | At the end she could see part of the ward , a gleaming parquet floor and white-painted bedsteads . |
21 | We can see part of the answer by looking at how modern DNA molecules cooperate in the chemical factories that are living cells . |
22 | He could see part of the canal , part of a garden , barges loaded with potatoes , a rear view of houses being pulled down by workmen , and in the distance rows of trees and street lamps , a complicated little almshouse with its gardens , and finally a grand expanse of roofs . |
23 | So you will see part of the moon Right . |
24 | And did you see vessels in the area , because you yourself would be too young were you not ? |
25 | Now that the death looked painful , now that he could see traces of a struggle , he began , in a kind of panic , to say things in his head , he began to talk to the dead man . |
26 | The missing bridge is not a mystery in itself and one can see traces of the formation of the structure at the far end of Swithland cutting about ¾ mile north of the station . |
27 | Going from window to window , he could see traces of the woman Susan had told him about , but Luke Mallen was a ghost in the place — nothing of him to be found ; except , in all that stillness , a sense of violence . |
28 | The valley , homely and tree clad , is spread below you and as you drop down from the pass , just above Thwaite , you can see Muker down the dale looking like a toy village . |
29 | I can see , I can see Richard through the keyhole . |
30 | All I could do was to mumble that I regretted not taking my degree , and , though I could see it was irritating of me to whine , to feel stale and bored was not such a trivial thing ; that though we might have the vote now , meals still had to be prepared and children looked after and since this kind of drudgery was despised by society as not being ‘ real work ’ , we were in the hideous position of being both exhausted and imprisoned by it and also looked down on for doing it ; that I had honestly tried to be the sort of wife Richard wanted — and the sort of wife I felt I ought to be — but it was like being in a kind of airless cell and I could only see Richard as a jailer ; that I saw myself becoming progressively more and more incapable of doing anything , not just mentally , but from some kind of paralysis of will . |