Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] saw [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I 've never been to Germany since , never seen anymore of it than I saw from the air that day in 1945 , and I ca n't say I 've ever wanted to .
2 Once I saw in the studio one of the Target paintings , but it was the wrong year .
3 The heron profile that she saw through the grille .
4 The top layer was built , that you saw in the photograph , was built later , so 31 and 32 had two rooms , erm on the ground floor , and 2 on the first floor , 33 , which was smaller , but it does have a fair sized room , and another upstairs , and then the very small one is 34 .
5 The wa the river water 's very very polluted there , so a lot of people got tummy bugs and we slept er on the side of the river in little tents and erm we did n't discover till afterwards , two things , one thing was that the little holes that we saw in the sand were actually scorpion holes
6 Well , Mercer 's father had exactly the same rinds of dead flesh on his hands that we saw in the Delta .
7 He assures me we both , from what he and I saw on the spot , can go beyond what Jerome himself knows . ’
8 And there he was , I went to look and I saw at the end there , a big pile of erm earth fresh earth you know .
9 She stared at him a moment , her eyes narrowed slightly , as if she saw through the flesh to the bone itself , and while he met her staring eyes unflinchingly , something in the depths of him squirmed and tried to break away .
10 If you saw in the paper as I did .
11 But I saw in the newspaper that , in three weeks , the new young King , Rudolf the Fifth , would have his coronation .
12 ‘ I was going to , but I saw in the newspaper the next morning that he had died . ’
13 The grid screen is now shown , 45 squares wide and 38 squares high , as we saw for the intarsia chart printing .
14 As we saw with the Treasury , organisational culture will impact on budgetary behaviour .
15 ( But , as we saw in the Faulhaber example , not all average cost prices are sustainable in general . )
16 As we saw in the case of the bacteria on a pin 's head , successive splittings into two can generate a very large number of cells in rather a short time .
17 Just as we saw in the case of a bank 's assets , these two criteria tend to conflict .
18 But , as we saw in the discussion of neoclassicism , it was unrealistic to suppose that questions of intent and responsibility could be abandoned .
19 I am not suggesting that it is proven that our motives , reasons and purposes are not themselves reducible to mechanically operating causal factors , as a fully determinist model would have it ; but if that is the case , we are so far from being able to specify these factors that they do not offer a model we can actually work with — as we saw in the discussion of positivist criminology in Chapter 2 .
20 Of course , this reflects the very different role of the American courts vis-a-vis other governmental institutions but , as we saw in the discussion of courts and rights ( chapter 18 ) , if one has no right to information it becomes extremely difficult to exercise all manner of other rights .
21 There are still problems to iron out , and as we saw in the passage by Ross , there are still inconsistencies .
22 As we saw in the chapter dealing with rules , it is not enough for your punch to be an effective scoring technique ; it must be seen to be so , and this entails making its success obvious .
23 The form that literary studies had taken during the second half of the nineteenth century , positivism , was , as we saw in the Introduction , largely based on the genetic approach ; critics , or rather scholars , concentrated their energies on uncovering the sources and genesis of particular works , and the role of biography , history and history of ideas in these genetic studies obviously reduced the importance of literature itself in literary scholarship .
24 Feelings , as we saw in the entry under that heading ( see pages 66 to 69 ) , either help or hinder your behaviour .
25 As we saw in the section on deterrence , all the evidence is that the penal system is engaging in a massive overkill operation — which amounts to a massive infringement of the human rights of those it punishes excessively .
26 As we saw in the example of the cleaner fish ( pages 186–7 ) , reciprocal altruism is not confined to members of a single species .
27 An exciting game at Heathfield saw Dawn Nicholson top score on 22 points for the home team as they saw off the challenge of Shildon Aces by 68 points to 47 .
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