Example sentences of "[vb base] [adv] see how [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Look inside to see how Oxford can help …
2 They heard the muffled thud as the charge blew before they set off to see how others were faring on this southern lock .
3 The first is that we do not see how states could possibly be regarded as merely one kind of actor among several on the international scene .
4 I do not see how Greater Glasgow health board can be dissatisfied with the consultation process when it is responsible for —
5 I do not see how relief can be denied to Handscomb in consequence of this as well as other declaratory relief which will be later formulated .
6 I do not see how expansion could happen without a substantial increase in government funding .
7 Since halofantrine was introduced in 1989 we do not see how data collected in 1990 go against our hypothesis that drug pressure led to the resistance we observed in 1992 .
8 Perhaps I 'm missing something , but I do n't see how swapping a huge Tory majority for a small one is a triumph for them and a disaster for us — a relief for them and a disappointment for us , perhaps .
9 Do n't see how cavalry can deploy effectively on those slopes .
10 ‘ I do n't see how sawdust can help you to sell second-hand cars , daddy . ’
11 Erm t th certainly it makes me really angry that people have to struggle for the basics and I you know I I just do n't see how people who are on long term benefits , erm state benefits , can survive without getting into serious debt .
12 ‘ I do n't see how people can say it was n't a good race , ’ he said .
13 The idea that it was a foreign plot seems to be the least likely of the possibilities , because although Stalin believed that they wanted to crush Russia I do n't see how killing Kirov this would help a foreign power in any way to crush Stalin 's Russia .
14 ‘ If this is true , I do n't see how Quinn could have known about it .
15 We have already seen how Galileo argued , on theological grounds , for the differentiation of scientific and theological propositions , and how he created difficulties for himself in the process .
16 We have already seen how section 76 of the 1944 Act proved to be ineffective at forcing compliance by LEAs to parental wishes .
17 We have already seen how authority within companies is deemed legitimate when it is based on educational achievement and length of service ; attitudes towards public sector bureaucrats who occupy high office are likewise framed by the priority given to individual merit displayed by educational status .
18 We have already seen how Althusser rejects the claim that individuals are intentional subjects , and argues instead that this self-perception is a result of ideological practice .
19 We have just seen how Kierkegaard rejected any idea that faith could be proved by the appeal to historical argument .
20 We have also seen how Raman polarization data and gas-phase band contours may be used to make complete assignments of the observed bands to vibrations of particular symmetry species .
  Next page