Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] [adv] see the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Yeremi could still see the tube wall quite clearly with his enhanced vision .
2 They remind us that this is the very beginning of the idea of representing the world about us as it actually appears ; that we must think away our hindsight and remember that these artists could not see the way ahead .
3 That is governments may well see the need to take microeconomic measures to deal with problems created by changes in the performance of the macro and world economies .
4 The next five years will also see the implementation of tests for seven , 11 and 14 year olds ; a shift towards ‘ on the job ’ teacher training ; and the transformation of some grant-maintained institutions into grammar schools .
5 However , insects can not see the warning spots , and to them the spider 's disguise is deadly perfect .
6 Owners will usually see the value of their property increase and it is often a selling point in estate agents ’ particulars that a house stands in a conservation area .
7 They witness to a certainty that all the diversity of living beings are a part of a transcendent unifying spiritual whole which is by definition difficult to grasp in its totality ; individual dancers can not see the pattern of the whole dance — that is perceived only from outside .
8 Patients may not see the relevance of giving information about their social history when their problem is a physical one — and it may not be .
9 Instead , the UK accountancy bodies would rather see the Commission adopt the guidelines of the International Accounting Standards Committee ( IASC ) , which has been working progressively towards the international harmonisation of the rules by which companies report .
10 Of course , your neighbours wo n't see the Woodworker Fellowship logo so you will need to acquire an additional cloth badge to show off your membership .
11 Non-train ticket holders can still see the road traction engine display at Swanage at £1 for adults and just 50 pence for children .
12 Some doctors may not see the relevance of recording details of clinical signs .
13 Pupils could not see the relevance of what they were asked to do and so lost motivation .
14 The blackbirds that saw it quickly treated this bird as though it were potentially dangerous and mobbed it , even when their fellows could not see the owl and so were making no noise .
15 Where that information relates to national security , all that the Government has to show is that publication might cause some injury to the national interest — a test which would ensure that the British equivalent of the Pentagon Papers would never see the light of day .
16 Moreover , few British schools at present include private study periods on the timetable , except for the sixth form , so the teacher knows that his students can only see the sequence in breaks and before and after school , unless he allows time in his own assigned periods with them .
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