Example sentences of "[adv] see [noun sg] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Cnut 's absence had obviously seen unrest in the area , but unless it was connected with the return of the ætheling Eadwig ( date unknown , see above ) its nature is obscure .
2 They returned to the community — to the Church , always see ministry in the context of the Church .
3 They always see sense in the end .
4 But the politicians have also seen research in the arts , social and natural sciences , as a vital part of national development : the government has been a generous sponsor of research , partly to underpin West Germany 's thriving high technology industries , and partly to continue rebuilding intellectual life after its almost total dissolution in the 1930s .
5 It later saw service in the Napoleonic wars and as an anti-aircraft point in this century .
6 Visitors also see part of the Bournville packaging plant , as well as displays on distribution , marketing and the famous Cadbury advertisements .
7 Recent studies from the Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food ( MAFF ) have now seen evidence of the migration of dioxins from chlorine bleached milk cartons into milk after a period of storage .
8 What the , I believe committees have never had and least of all Mr papers produced on behalf of Mr have never had a serious rigorous objective assessment of the vacancy situation of the future which first of all starts from issue a rolling programme of refurbishments that we have n't really seen sight of the of the implications of that on the number of vacancies .
9 He is more accessible than most tycoons and is frequently seen dining in the works canteen at Wapping .
10 Trade unionists increasingly saw underconsumption as the cause of stagnant trade , for , as the manifesto of the woollen textile workers stated on the eve of the 1925 textile lock-out : ‘ There is no greater fallacy today than to think we could get back to prosperity by reducing wages . ’
11 Easily Accessible : Please see entry on The Orchard , Bathford , p.32 .
12 Easily Accessible : Please see entry on The Orchard , Bath , p.32 .
13 Using a Barthesian notion of myth , i.e. seeing myth as the signifying process by which ideology is naturalised , and film therefore as a myth-making medium , Johnston and Cook 's work was concerned with classic Hollywood cinema .
14 Old fair hands could doubtless see order in the chaos , the separate camps of the different families within the larger camp .
15 Christine Brooke-Rose does not go so far as to disavow authorial creativity altogether , but she too sees technology as the possible key to a breakthrough in how we think about the human subject .
16 The Profitboss likes action , and by definition he never sees action on the board .
17 ‘ You said you never saw action in the last war ? ’
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