Example sentences of "to be seen on [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Venice was obviously a city to be seen on foot or , better still , she thought dreamily , by slow gondola , because everything was on the human scale without a city block in sight . |
2 | It was especially noticeable that no swastika banners were to be seen on houses where news of fallen relatives had been received . |
3 | The lights are always there so that Mrs Thatcher , at whatever hour , may choose to be seen on TV sweeping through saying nothing , thus demonstrating that she is Prime Minister and going busily about the nation 's business . |
4 | STEVE PYKE is a regular contributor to the pages of Esquire and took the photographs of Irish comedian Sean Hughes to be seen on pages 59 and 61 . |
5 | The magazines of the time carried article after article laying down the law of correct and essential dress in which to be seen on ocean crossings and cruises . |
6 | It was five-thirty in the evening , and there were still very few people to be seen on Felix Road . |
7 | She sang Susanna earlier this summer in Simon Rattle 's period Figaro for Glyndebourne ( due to be seen on BBC TV before Christmas ) and is now back at the Coliseum as Pamina in Nicholas Hytner 's luminously hieroglyphic Magic Flute . |
8 | We 've teamed up with Channel 4 's top show Brookside to bring you an exclusive competition that gives you the chance to be seen on screen in Merseyside 's favourite soap . |
9 | Sunderland has n't yet achieved the fame it deserves for being Britain 's newest city nowhere is it to be seen on York station 's platform timetables . |
10 | We should make the point that the violence we have seen on film ( from films refused a certificate , or cut before the film could be certified ) far exceeds in nastiness anything likely to be seen on television . |
11 | The Mechonoids appeared only in the last episode of ‘ The Chase ’ before they disappeared , never to be seen on Television again . |
12 | Robed choirs are in decline in New Zealand , although smartly dressed secular choirs are to be seen on television . |
13 | But as the men in suits — the politicians — give way to the men in the studios — the experts — it seems too obvious even to mention the fact that these days there is hardly a woman 's face to be seen on television . |
14 | Even now she 's frightened to be seen on television for fear of reprisals . |
15 | A Special General Meeting called by the National Council was held at this time , a report of which is to be seen on page 13 . |
16 | To try to rejuvenate his fading presidency Reagan wanted to be seen on prime-time network television across America greeting each hostage in turn as they stepped safely back on to American soil . |