Example sentences of "[noun] see [art] [noun] for " in BNC.

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1 The announcement recently that Wimpey Laboratories and G-C Engineers and Consultants are to establish a joint venture company to deal with nuclear waste indicates that private industry sees a role for itself .
2 Marcuse saw a possibility for developing a new , critical , science not dependent on instrumental reason or the ideological form of modern science and technology .
3 Trailer-wise , complaints from guards about excessive noise in the guard 's compartment at the rear of the power car saw an order for 101 second-class trailers hurriedly modified to include a small compartment for them .
4 The authors see the requirement for the nurse to re-register every three years ( periodic licensing ) , as an important step forward in ensuring ‘ that all patients receive the highest level of care and that the qualified nurse can really be seen to be in a position of accountability ’ .
5 And now old churches are acquiring palisades and fortified towers faster than gospel-books , and new churches appear where a Norman baron sees the need for a fortress .
6 The Guild sees a need for MAFF to be restructured so that food comes first .
7 Other countries saw the need for such policies years ago .
8 After that , since she now spent as much time as possible on deck keeping out of the way of her cousins , with whom she felt a constraint , Ruth saw the woman for several days in a row .
9 The National Consumer Council saw the need for a greater effort , particularly in regard to funding , to give advice to the 560,000 households in Britain who at any time had three or more ‘ problem debts ’ , and the 170,000 who had five or more .
10 The majority of the Parish Council see no reason for the planning authority to alter their decision and have asked me to re-state the comments made in my letter of 18 November 1991 ( Ref WBCP/22/1811 ) .
11 Now many Indians see no future for them in Fiji and there is a mass exodus .
12 It is often difficult for people in organisations to see the wood for the trees , and it is very , easy to concentrate on large amounts of internal detail while ignoring important trends in the outside world .
13 It would be interesting to have research into the period of initial onset of the illness and the ability of families to obtain specialist advice for the sick family member , particularly as in this illness the patient has rarely the insight to see the need for medical assistance .
14 When one has told a friend about a stage performance or some media utterance that one feels he should go to see , one has performed that work to the friend and partly negated his need to see the work for himself .
15 The investor may not be happy for the vendor to see the report for different reasons .
16 However , Tumin sees no reason for continuing this compensation for the rest of an individual 's working life .
17 Professor Glanville Williams sees the reason for the extended rule to have been an early uncertainty as to the nature of a joint and several obligation : see Joint Obligations , p. 135 .
18 1.3.4 Other groups such as the Scottish Sports Council and the Scottish Health Education Group saw the opportunity for providing some form of national accreditation for health and fitness training , sports coaching and community sports leadership .
19 The Labour Party Conference : Caustic Skinner sees no future for nice people
20 ‘ The court sees no ground for saying that , for present purposes , it makes the slightest difference whether under the old law the offence would have been false pretences or larceny by a trick .
21 St William 's Foundation sees the need for a programme of action which will explore new paths , side step old obstacles , find lateral avenues to solution of apparently intractable problems .
22 Sam saw no need for further secrecy over her affair with Quinn .
23 And although BOC was not an existing pcEXPRESS user , the organisation saw the potential for tailoring and developing , using the underlying pcEXPRESS language .
24 John Cadbury saw the potential for the product , and with his experience in roasting beans and preparing nib for his shop , decided to open a factory .
25 When , in 1839 , the Sultan made a disastrous attempt to recoup his losses of 1833 , all the Great Powers saw the need for keeping the new conflict within bounds .
26 The parliamentary Select Committee on Education saw a need for clarification and a more analytical approach , but the call for a national advisory body was rejected by the government .
27 Given Bolshevik interest in obscuring the truth about this struggle , libertarians see no cause for surprise that ‘ we know less today about the early weeks of the Russian Revolution [ i.e. after October ] than we do , for instance , about the history of the Paris Commune . ’
28 More conservative writers see a tendency for power to diffuse out of government to interest group elites making policy in continuous negotiation with executive agencies , under the remit of wide ‘ enabling ’ legislation passed by the legislature and thereafter incapable of being controlled ( Lowi , 1969 ) .
29 When Marek saw the headstone for the first time no one in the neighbourhood whom he asked knew anything about the man who had been buried there .
30 When the true meaning of the custom had been forgotten , and the maypole had become merely a part of the holiday festivities , people saw no reason for felling a new tree every year and began to leave one erected permanently , merely decking it with flowers and fresh greenery on Mayday .
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