Example sentences of "see [adv] in " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I could n't see properly in that light , but by the way he kept his head turned away , I could tell he was blushing .
2 His eyes were still fixed on her , but she knew he could see little in the dark corner .
3 Yet for all his own pleasure at tracing this evidence , Dixon could see little in his report which might have accounted for the look of extraordinary triumph he had seen on Morse 's face when he reported in at 2.45 p.m .
4 , well I mean , I did do what you want , Penny and I would come along but I think you 'd see better in , in a box .
5 The lack of a single authoritative constitutional document means that it is relatively difficult to point to breaches of the constitution by British governments , although it is by no means impossible , as we shall see below in cases involving national security .
6 We ca n't see much in this dark gulley , but he can feel that barrel .
7 There is a distinction to be drawn between an evacuation of the kind that we may see tonight in Dubrovnik and an interdiction naval force designed to prevent , for example , the shelling of Dubrovnik by Yugoslav gun boats .
8 This is a very important consideration , for , as we shall see shortly in the discussion of the marketing mix , there are certain key issues , such as pricing , which have to be considered and agreed on a shared basis .
9 I think we will see more in trouble , ’ he says .
10 Nobody cared and now nobody can even see clearly in Los Angeles where twenty-eight days spent in the city constitute a health hazard , and smog from car exhausts hangs over the L A basin from the San Gabriel mountains to the ocean .
11 We shall see repeatedly in what follows that polysyllables are particularly resistant to change and that a following sonorant + voiceless obstruent is also relatively resistant .
12 As we shall see later in this chapter , the case for the status quo is perhaps too general and too romantic in its assessment of the value of the existing structures .
13 How deep the problem goes we shall see later in this chapter .
14 As we shall see later in this essay , however , there is a definite , and what at first sight may appear to be surprising , degree of isomorphism between the two perspectives .
15 Although rural housing , as we shall see later in this chapter , has never been in plentiful supply , the newcomers provide an easy scapegoat for the otherwise ‘ hidden hand ’ of the housing market .
16 In the intervening years the environmental lobby has probably gathered a broader basis of support , although , as we shall see later in this chapter , the values which are upheld are often more sectional than many environmentalists might suppose .
17 By definition , of course , work employing the concept of the variable is quantitative ; but as we shall see later in this chapter , much interesting work on syntactic variation ( by Sankoff and others ) is qualitative , or a mixture of qualitative and quantitative approaches .
18 We shall see later in Part II that this decline of manufacturing employment was closely identified with the heavy growth of unemployment in the 1980s , and with its concentration in most industrial towns and cities outside the South East , places which typically had rates of unemployment of 14 to 20 per cent .
19 As we will see later in this chapter , there is evidence that relating new information to earlier information is an important aspect of language comprehension .
20 In this sense they function as ‘ banks ’ even though , as we shall see later in this section , they differ in numerous respects .
21 ( Usually the JOIN operator is more appropriate , as we shall see later in this section . )
22 But these considerations which , as we shall see later in this book , are of the utmost significance for our principal theme , also touch on a paradox to which the reader 's attention must be drawn .
23 As we shall see later in the chapter , however , there is a potential conflict between using interest rates to control the demand for money and using them also to control the exchange rate .
24 In terms of the papers in front of you this morning , Chair , the position is that , that is addressed over the three year period , and the figures do fluctuate between years , so there is a , as we 'll see later in the paper , there is a , a net expenditure total in year one which increases in year two , but then is offset by a , a reduction in year three .
25 And you can see like like there can you see straight in front of you there 's a worn patch on the carpet , but there 's er been a li a bit of a leak at some stage .
26 That 's so he ca n't see out in the garden
27 At last he raised his head , and with a feeling of dread she searched for the triumph she was sure she must see now in his eyes .
28 Perched above the grass , they could see far in every direction .
29 You can also see well in all directions , the controls are responsive and the instrumentation clear .
30 And further on we shall see how in a somewhat similar way society substitutes one undertaker for another who is less efficient in proportion to his charges .
  Next page