Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] see [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 And so I see no particular problem about the E two in relation to local needs housing policy .
2 You are happily filling your basket with the week 's groceries when you turn the corner into the next aisle and suddenly you see a roaring lion , its teeth glistening , open-mouthed and heading straight for you .
3 " From the quarter-deck to the space below you see the utmost extremity of human misery ; such crowding , such filth , such stench .
4 It contains the sentence : ‘ Looking down you see the bloody head of a harpoon protruding from your stomach .
5 So you see a little article
6 So you see the commercial aspects were still in there in those days as they are today .
7 Thus they see no legal or moral obligation to accept any decision of the IWC on proposed quotas and moratoria .
8 Always you see the written list after the tenth word and then go through the list again with your PP ( never repeating the individual word of course , but knowing the subject you will now find the words easier to recognize ) .
9 When ever you see the Multibuy symbol it means the more you buy the more you save .
10 The more people see them the more they see the human frailties .
11 The macabre cadaver is not the chosen depiction — rather we see a fresh corpse , almost as though we are viewing him immediately after his shrouding .
12 When I stand up I see the wooden block full of knives on the work surface , just visible by moonlight next to the gently gleaming stainless steel of the sinks .
13 Looking up I see an ageing female , flowered hem in one hand , Panama held on head with the other , racing towards us .
14 But everytime I see a new line on my face , I 'm also hysterically thinking it 's all over . ’
15 If we look at them carefully we see a faint band in it but we ca n't count the bands this way , we can see them much better with X- rays .
16 ‘ The English are great lovers of themselves , and of everything belonging to them ’ , wrote the Venetian diplomat Andrea Trevisano at the end of the fifteenth century ; ‘ they think that there are no other men than themselves , and no other world but England ; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner , they say that he ‘ looks like an Englishman' ’ and that ‘ it is a great pity that he should not be an Englishman ’ , words echoed exactly in 1521 by the Scottish scholar John Major ; while the German knight Nicolas von Popplau , who visited England in 1484 , found a people who regarded themselves as the wisest in the world .
17 The Venetian author of the Italian Relation of England commented specifically on the English sense of national pride , and presumably was thinking of attitudes which he encountered generally and not merely the point of view of the more literate : ' … the English are great lovers of themselves and everything belonging to them ; they think that there are no other men than themselves , and no other world but England ; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner , they say ‘ he looks like an Englishman ’ ' ( 35 , pp.20–1 ) .
18 There is deep regret and lamentation on Sir Bedivere 's behalf for the loss of Arthur and his now useless life as shown in ‘ where shall I hide my forehead and my eyes ? /For now I see the true old times are dead , ’ There is a real passion for Bedivere as shown in theses words .
19 Often you see a beautiful girl with an ugly guy and people say ‘ Why is she with him ? ’ or vice versa , but that person may have something that you 'll never have .
20 Because you often you see the English word , you 've no idea where it comes about it 's just an odd word when it 's been
21 They were simply buying time , came out with a white paper that meant absolutely nothing and now we see the full effects of it .
22 This complex statement need not be analysed here but just think how often we see a certain politician , good though he may be , declared as " never coming across on the TV " .
23 All too often they see the European enterprise as one huge thicket of hostility and conspiracy .
24 Most importantly they see the social structure of capitalist societies as being based not upon conflict but upon shared values .
25 If we contemplate the main abbey church of Reichenau today we see a gigantic church with a vast nave , and this is the product of a new fashion of the late tenth and eleventh centuries .
26 Gone now is the stylized shroud , for here we see a naturalistic figure , almost a portrait , wrapped in a very convincing linen sheet .
27 Here we see a characteristic attempt , evident on a range of fronts , to break down the dualisms of normativism .
28 Here we see the usual linen winding-sheet , parted to show not only the face but the entire body , with the arms placed at his side and turned in at the elbows so that the hands meet over the groin .
29 But here we see the Scottish Office actually cutting programmes in anticipation of grants which can not be guaranteed . ’
30 Here we see the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers operating on the other flank of NATO with the ACE Mobile Force
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