Example sentences of "[adj] see the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 It is often possible to see the vestigial remains of rear limbs on these large snakes .
2 Dead lucky you were getting in free to see the Olympic Games a couple of years ago . ’
3 In truth the work exhibits great variety , not only in the gestures and postures of the different figures , but in the composition of each subject , besides which it is very interesting to see the various costumes of those times and certain imitations and observations of Nature .
4 The ongoing development is continued in the story right up to the present day and it is very interesting to see the numerous designs which have been tried , tested and put into operation .
5 Turn to page 30 to see the stunning results .
6 In the light of day , it clear to see the potential dangers of the drive .
7 Now they were too high to see the great waves of the southern Atlantic carry the whales on their singing pilgrimages .
8 I WAS interested to see the All Blacks trial teams that were announced last week .
9 I was very interested to see the old photographs in the Veterans News , and I wondered if you would care to see this photo of the darts team .
10 Those who comprehend this see the noblest feelings frustrated or distorted .
11 It is always sad to see the wounded animals .
12 But surely it would be more appropriate to see the two perspectives as complementary .
13 This follows the realisation that if the hunters succeeded in wiping out the goats the vegetation might swiftly regenerate , making it impossible to see the wary pigs .
14 At a time when there is such disaffection from socialism among many thinking people it is ironic to see the Christian churches attempting to accommodate themselves to what is at heart a devilish religion and ideology .
15 People treat you differently , though I was glad to see the other riders reacted well .
16 They drove slowly along the main street , Juliet too tense to see the pretty shops selling antiques and gifts .
17 The 1990s are likely to see the last days of the political baronets .
18 But if he comes to the top of the ridge , he is sure to come down here , because he w ill see the green leaves .
19 It is great to see the same faces each time I come back .
20 It is great to see the same faces each time I come back .
21 More immediately , it was very good to see the Prime Ministers of Czechoslovakia and Hungary , and the acting Prime Minister of Poland , in Brussels on Monday , signing the association agreements between those countries and the Community and thus bringing to fruition an initiative begun by my right hon. Friend the Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) .
22 It is depressing to see the predicted problems materialising one after another , and even more damaging to morale when it becomes apparent that the message we are trying to get across — that a so called free market is no way to ensure the satisfactory provision of health care to an aging population — has not been appreciated by those in a position to make a difference .
23 It made Hari so angry to see the little ones neglected but there was very little anyone could do , poverty was a fact of life in places like World 's End .
24 ‘ I was certainly happy to see the American soldiers at Brunau ’ .
25 While I stress that we believe that the safest limit is no alcohol at all , we should be reluctant to see the Metropolitan police in London entering railway property willy-nilly to enforce the provisions of the Bill .
26 The time passed all too quickly but later all were able to see the resultant masks of heads and hands thus produced .
27 This great change in scientific thinking meant little to the masses , but they were able to see the great benefits of modern scientific practice despite the faltering of the economic system .
28 Even if I had no longer been able to see the real images in my mind I could see their representations as clearly as if they hung before me , and the two were beginning to run together .
29 3.14 There is a head of damage which is sometimes called the loss of amenities ; the man made blind by the accident will no longer be able to see the familiar things he has seen all his life ; the man who has had both legs removed and will never again go upon his walking excursions — things of that kind — loss of amenities ( per Birkett LJ in Manley v Rugby Portland Cement Co Ltd , a decision of the Court of Appeal in 1951 ) .
30 The successful candidates will also be able to see the finished results of their new look in the June edition of the Clothes Show Magazine .
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