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

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1 In Williams ' chapter ( 3.1 ) , we may perhaps see a justification of equality of condition or outcome on the basis of equality of opportunity .
2 The one in particular I 'm referring to you will see we 'd all see the Son of Man , they they 'd recognised that reference to himself Son of Man , they 'd recognised that because that comes out of the Old Testament Book of Daniel does n't it , the Son of Man seated on the right hand of the Almighty coming with the clouds of heaven .
3 A further example of the parallelism of greater precision may be found here , though commentators do not generally see the connection of thought between the two lines .
4 Holly could not resist , and they squeezed him out from the hole and when his feet were clear the two men stamped together on the steel plate to flatten it back , and between his knees he could no longer see the whiteness of snow on the stones and the zebra flash of the sleepers .
5 He sensed the growing tension in Mariana and felt her turn her head so that she could no longer see the wall of cloud less than half a mile to their left .
6 Within a day or two it appeared that a complete South African team would be fielded and Treviso might just see the start of rugby 's World War III .
7 They must once have been the focus of her beauty , and although they were sunken now , he could still see the glint of intelligence behind them .
8 It 's pretty unlikely that this session will ever see the light of day on Strange Fruit , as the label 's last Wah release ‘ The Mighty Wah ’ proved about as popular as a motorway scheme through Kew Gardens .
9 He could also see a line of washing , which included , he realized to his delight , the clerical undergarments .
10 I could also see the colour of paint I was using due to the pearly-white bristles .
11 Get to the back of the drawers and cupboards — areas which do n't often see the light of day .
12 If he is of a poetic turn of mind , will he even see a kind of justice in the eventual return to silicon-based life , with DNA no more than an interlude , albeit one that lasted longer than three aeons ?
13 Hoover could n't even see the point of intelligence reports which showed Japan 's interest in how to attack a deep harbour , and how deep Pearl Harbour might be .
14 There 's one short answer : 1992 will indeed see the removal of trade barriers between the 12 EC states and the seven in the European Trade Association ( EFTA ) , but nothing happens until 31 December .
15 Nicholson remained slightly ahead of his group so that they could never quite see the expression of disdain of his face .
16 Next time you see that familiar mushroom cloud rearing up ( hopefully on your T.V. screen , not across the road ) , look at the base or stalk of the mushroom , and you 'll almost certainly see a ring of cloud rolling away horizontally from it .
17 If it is your first work of fiction , you should also look at it as part of your groundwork which although it may never see the light of publication , is of great benefit to you as a writer .
18 Sadly , for it was a lively , largely autobiographical piece , it would never see the light of day .
19 Dragons can lie for dark centuries brooding over their treasures , bedding down on frozen flames that will never see the light of day .
20 Many of Brindley 's ideas were regarded as the hair-brained schemes of a madman which would never see the light of day .
21 Rowden is a fine school and it 'll give him plenty of sports and develop a side of him which could never see the light of day in Ireland .
22 You will probably never see the light of day again ! ’
23 In this contriving to do the obvious thing in a way not altogether obvious will lie the difference between producing a run-of-the-mill story , which may well never see the light of day , and producing a story with that something extra .
24 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 .
25 If you do n't , you will never see the light of day in print .
26 Discs , may never actually see the light of day .
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