Example sentences of "[be] see by [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | We have far too great a gap between these two states which I think all magistrates are very conscious of and which all defendants are very conscious of , and particularly from the public point of view again erm the present alternatives to custody are seen by members of the public as soft options , are seen as a let off . |
2 | Philosophy and later social-science structuralism à la Lévi-Strauss are seen by Bourdieu to be , in their ‘ objectivism ’ , somehow au dessus de la mêlée . |
3 | Genital dermatoses are seen by specialists from disciplines other than dermatology , and the evolution of multidisciplinary teams running combined clinics for vulval diseases has led to improved diagnoses and management of patients with these problems . |
4 | The challenge to take hold of the world and mould it into the Utopia so desired has so far not been seen by humanity to be what it is . |
5 | True , it would not have been seen by people in Bristol or Birmingham but it might just have struck a chord with somebody in the area where the crime was committed . |
6 | Modern Scottish Glass has already been seen by scores of visitors to the Tweeddale Museum , Peebles . |
7 | History has been seen by politicians of all parties as being vital to informed citizenship . |
8 | The importance of temporary jobs as a way back into work for persons who have been unemployed can be seen by reference to both the LFS and PSI 's Unemployed Flow Survey . |
9 | This can be seen by reference to the labour market for secretarial/office skills in the South East and Greater London . |
10 | The formation of the directorate will be seen by critics of the Government 's food policy as a tacit admission that its response to recent food scares has been muddled and sometimes too slow . |
11 | However , what an owner sees as his due rights may be seen by others as undue privilege ; and where the general interest is material enough to insist on the second alternative , it may with whatever necessary degree of consideration and justice , seek to override the first . |
12 | Now you must design an additional five feet all around ( shaded portion ) , this will be seen by persons in the stalls etc. , or in the side stalls . |
13 | At least one panel member thought that an exemplar set of papers should be produced by SCOTVEC to show what was required , but others felt that an exemplar might be seen by colleges as a check list , and that close adherence to it could stifle initiative and innovation . |
14 | If the two pairs of projectors are in line , the intention is not usually a multi-image effect In fact , it s likely that the two projectors nearer to the camera will not contain so much an image as an image-blocker , ie a mask or matte that blocks out part of the image behind it Since the two mattes will normally be complementary , and the combined image can be seen by inspection through the camera 's viewfinder , any faults , such as overlaps or gaps , should be observed at the time and , if possible , corrected on a second , third or fourth take This is more economical and satisfactory than getting the results of multiple passes back from the lab and discovering that a whole day 's work has to be redone . |
15 | This may be done in various ways , but one simple and useful device is to adopt two auxiliary variables : unc and to write the equations in the form unc Then if we now write unc and unc proportional to exp unc and again seek the complementary function , the four equations may be written , with a little rearrangement , unc This equation can clearly be written in partitioned form as unc or unc where unc The quartic determinantal equation obtained from this first-order set of equations may be seen by inspection to be identical with that obtained from the quadratic formulation . |
16 | But the introduction of the budget may be seen by operatives in a more negative perspective of controls being imposed upon them . |
17 | Even then she might have decided not to answer him , or she could have let it be seen by accident before knowing what it was . |
18 | These subtler bodies , variously named etheric , astral and so on , can be seen by sensitives as an aura around the physical body . |
19 | This might be because the latter category of temporary worker is less subject to union control than the former and might thus be seen by unions as a greater " threat " whose use is to be resisted . |
20 | I meant only that this is a matter of your will , and ought to be seen by men to be carried out in your name and at your direction . |
21 | He had drawn his sword and held it , not yet in challenge aloft , but where the naked blade could just be seen by men on horse-back . |
22 | If , on the other hand , it accepts Ratliff 's scheme , and in the process allows the destruction of Henderson Island , this will inevitably be seen by conservationists as a sell out — a deliberate evasion of our colonial responsibilities for the dwindling community on Pitcairn . |
23 | The implication can be seen by thinking of the instruction part and the key phrase or word . |
24 | On assumption of power labour attempted to implement a programme of progressive reform but in pursuit of this adopted methods that were seen by opponents to be an open challenge to representative democracy . |
25 | In the vast majority of cases , soil conservation measures were seen by land-users to be a symptom of oppression either by a colonial regime or by small interlocking urban elites . |
26 | Involving airborne and seaborne troops , warships and fighter-planes and bombers , the US manoeuvres were seen by Cuba as a rehearsal for invasion , but described by the US Defence Department as routine . |
27 | Trailers featuring the zany actress in the comedy Death Becomes Her were seen by cinema-goers across America . |
28 | The extent to which central training staff of local authorities were seen by libraries to be involved in their training was examined , and the provision of central courses they offered was also looked at ( in Chapter 5 ) , leading to the conclusion that central training provision reflects the overall policy of , and general commitment to training of the parent authority , and thus is likely to coincide with existence of other resources . |
29 | Amalgamemnon takes Cassandra 's voice as representative of the way in which the discourse of women is seen by society at large . |
30 | ‘ Authoritarian populism ’ is seen by Hall as the latest stage in a long historical development of postwar British politics . |