Example sentences of "see [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 What we may see as the first classical statue of a draped woman , corresponding to the naked male of the Kritian boy , is likewise from the Acropolis and could likewise have been set there just before or just after the interruptions of 480/79 .
2 ‘ Suppose we go with what the kid says , what do you see as the next step ? ’
3 And they could see for the first time the lights of settlements off in the dark distance of the Vale .
4 He could n't see round the next bend , he must record , tapes were periscopes , his only chance , and the slow ink stolen and the wheels turning , and everything remembered , everything proved , he was whispering now , ‘ Why five , ’ he was whispering , ‘ is n't one enough ? ’ and a voice came back , a woman 's , Sharon 's , ‘ One what ? ’
5 As we shall see in the second part of this chapter , their conflict with the house of Foix was to become a dominant theme of the politics of south-west France .
6 Do you see in the first two movements of the Fifth and in the whole of the Sixth a certain prophetic note , or do you see them in purely musical terms ?
7 Making concessions to Lenin 's Indian and ‘ Asia-First ’ opponent , M N Roy , the Commission had , throughout the theses , replaced ‘ bourgeois-democratic ’ by ‘ revolutionary ’ and the result was , as one may see in the sixth thesis , that the revolutionary-liberation movement in backward countries or among backward nationalities was invited to determine what forms this alliance should take .
8 Even in a city like London , with no large industrial base and a preponderance of casual labourers , we can see in the last half of the nineteenth century , as Gareth Stedman Jones has put it , the ‘ emergence of a working class culture which showed itself impervious to middle class attempts to guide it ’ , even as it remained politically conservative , and it developed deeply rooted family patterns of its own .
9 The assumption that all groups in the ‘ not-men ’ class are identical with each other is so firmly rooted that , as we shall see in the fourth section , it is readily assumed even by modern libertarian thinkers that showing that , for example , some ground for distinguishing between men and women is false or irrelevant , immediately commits us to the view that the same ground is irrelevant in distinguishing men from children .
10 And erm er Doctor has looked into this matter , and you will see in the fourth paragraph of his letter of the twentieth
11 As we shall see in the next chapter , arriving at a balance between these two is often what drama educationalists are seeking .
12 We shall see in the next chapter how carrying comparisons with living animals too far can result in curious and inaccurate pictures of the past .
13 The results were not to be entirely bad , as we shall see in the next section .
14 Put in another way , the same smoothing recipe applied to different time series will produce different resulting shapes for the smooth , which , as we shall see in the next chapter , is not the case when fitting straight lines .
15 In either case , the line thus calculated is only a first approximation , and will be tuned up , as we shall see in the next section .
16 Rather than misdirecting attacks , they repel them altogether , as we shall see in the next chapter . .
17 One of those misled was Trotsky himself , who completely misread the real import of what Bukharin had written , as we shall see in the next chapter .
18 There is also evidence , as we have mentioned before and shall see in the next chapter , of the extensive use of air sacs in sauropods as cooling devices and for reducing mass .
19 Or — as we shall see in the next chapter — perhaps you have payoffs and hidden agendas which are keeping you stuck ?
20 As we shall see in the next chapter , there are those who believe that management have often adopted forms of work organisation which give rise to unsatisfying jobs because it is cheaper for them so to do .
21 It is the argument of Braverman and some other radicals ( though not of most of Braverman 's critics , as we shall see in the next chapter ) that within capitalism the inherently antagonistic relationship between capital and labour inevitably generates a ‘ low trust ’ relationship .
22 We shall see in the next section that partly as a result of secularisation religion has become privatised and inward looking .
23 As we shall see in the next chapter these very high strengths are not in fact confined to glass fibres but can be got from almost any solid , glassy or crystalline .
24 As we shall see in the next chapter , in natural materials like wood , the long-chain molecules are arranged roughly parallel to the length of the tree , that is to say , more or less in the direction of the most important stresses .
25 As we shall see in the next chapter , the consequence of this stiffness is that timber has had to evolve a work of fracture mechanism which is quite different and a good deal more ingenious .
26 And as we shall see in the next chapter , a number of feminists would agree with them about that .
27 Romanticism has had an immensely powerful impact on the modern outlook , and we shall see in the next chapter how it fed into theology at the beginning of the nineteenth century .
28 As we shall see in the next chapter , their commercial urge to expand was not adequately disciplined by proper costing , though in this particular case the distortions caused were quite small .
29 Their assumption that this could be ignored , and the data assumed to be objective representations of crime and criminality , was to prove to be one of their greatest weaknesses , as we shall see in the next chapter .
30 Through the state is one answer , as we shall see in the next section .
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