Example sentences of "[be] see from [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I believe that what we are seeing from President Moi and members of his Government is all going in the right direction .
2 Red-necked Grebes have been recorded in every month from August to May , but most are seen from October to February .
3 The king and his brother are seen from time to time , if infrequently — and appear lively and in good health .
4 Killer whales and pilot whales belong to the group known as ‘ toothed whales ’ ( and are related to the dolphins ) and both are seen from time to time around Shetland .
5 " Too many ill-presented , ill-written and extremely long-winded scripts are seen from candidates who seem to have little idea even of the basics of sentence construction . "
6 Many artists are now drawn to it , and find that it has other attractions than the records of the burial of kings : they love to paint the children who come to meet the tourist with wave-worn pebbles from the sacred isle , and also the scenery of Mull , and the many lochs that indent that isle of bold headlands and rugged mountains masses , as they are seen from Iona .
7 They say what they 're seeing from SunSoft Inc right now is a very commercially packaged product that looks to be pretty much a full-blown release but lacks personal computer compatibility or the ability to run Santa Cruz Operation Inc Unix software because of the extensions .
8 That this is an important variant of pluralist theory can be seen from Shils 's outline of the network of elites supporting and governing his society .
9 It will be seen from tables 1 and 2 that such very slow movements were more frequent than one might expect .
10 In general , technical description is only appropriate if it illustrates a point in your argument , as can be seen from problems in the following excerpt : The sonnet structure is appropriate to the subject .
11 Remember that it was designed to be seen from 20ft below and back .
12 For example , it gave news of ships in peril that could be seen from Fanefjord but not from Elmelunde ; of fires raging in the forest near Magleby that could not be seen at Børre ; of women in labour , requiring the services of a midwife .
13 THE newly-found Aarseth-Brewington comet should brighten rapidly this month as it sweeps southwards through Ophiuchus in our morning sky , perhaps to become a naked eye object before it dips too far south to be seen from Britain .
14 THE newly-found Aarseth-Brewington comet should brighten rapidly this month as it sweeps southwards through Ophiuchus in our morning sky , perhaps to become a naked eye object before it dips too far south to be seen from Britain .
15 Achernar , the closest really bright star to the south pole , can be seen from Cairo or anywhere in a more southerly latitude ; from New Zealand it is circumpolar .
16 Blooms of certain species of coccolithophores are so vast that they can be seen from space and , as a result , will provide information on global climatic changes .
17 Rostov the Great , Moscow , one of the many sites to be seen from Anna Karenina
18 Indeed these two characteristics are all that is needed in the case of the adjective ; the relative clause is in a sense a stalking horse , convenient in that it is more tangible than the relation around which it is built , but unnecessary , and awkward in that it brings with it , in English , the requirement that it must express a tense ; for while it is often possible to read a tense into an adjective there is no reason whatever to suppose that there is always some particular tense present to the mind of the speaker but suppressed , as can be seen from instances like ( 35 ) , where more than one tense could plausibly be grafted onto the sense expressed by the phrase underlined , or , just as well , some adverbial notion like " because " or " if " without any specific tense being implied : ( 35 ) motorists guilty will have to pay heavy fines Likewise , the buildings adjacent of example ( 17 ) simply take their tense from that of the clause as a whole ; if , for instance , we were to switch the tense of the verb in that example in order to shift the whole situation to past time : ( 36 ) the buildings adjacent were closed for three days it would be quite unnecessary to presume that an independent mental re-assignment of tense , from present to past , internal to the phrase buildings adjacent , has to take place as well .
19 In this case , as can be seen from BRS , all is not lost .
20 The reason for raising here the complexities of inflation , and savings as an alternative , is that as can be seen from Appendix 1 .
21 The other people in the restaurant , who might at other times have had stringent thoughts about race , or about white women publicly embracing black men ( or at least , not with such total lack of self-consciousness ) , were subdued — it could be seen from faces that showed tendencies to laugh too without reason to the demand of the occasion , which was for a total and uncritical abandon to happiness .
22 A similar picture can be seen from Chart 2 which shows how we are perceived in terms of providing ‘ high rates of interest for savings ’ .
23 This means that it can , in theory , rise from anywhere south of latitude 37 degrees north ; it can be seen from Alexandria , but not from Athens , so providing an early proof that the world is not flat !
24 In daylight they are only to be seen from ships at sea , when the two smaller petrels appear all dark birds with white rumps as they flutter and dance across the waves .
25 As the nineteenth century gathered pace many more libraries sprang up , as will be seen from examples given at the end of this book .
26 It was similar in the smaller towns , as can be seen from examples in Sussex and Buckinghamshire .
27 Henceforth it was to be seen from time to time on route 16/18 .
28 As can be seen from Figure 4 the age profile of all ethnic minority groups is typically younger than that of the white population .
29 As can be seen from Figure 2 , the macula is a minute area in the centre of the retina .
30 As can be seen from Figure 2 , the normal eye is virtually round , which means that rays of light coming from outside the eye are focused on the retina .
  Next page