Example sentences of "see the [noun] [prep] day " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Both are out of print and according to his publisher ( the wacky John Muir of Todmorden ) are unlikely ever to see the light of day again .
2 As well as inventing the thin crisp biscuit that bears his name , Sylvester Graham was also the author of one of the most amusing condemnations of sex ever to see the light of day .
3 Future page makeup programs that also have yet to see the light of day include SPUD , now called Scoop , which looked truly amazing when we saw a preview last year , and MacPage which is an Israeli program primarily designed for broadsheet and newspaper production .
4 The hon. Gentleman will appreciate that it would not be the first inspector 's decision that took some time to see the light of day once it had been referred to a Department .
5 And eventually , Guinness as we know it , rich subtle and dark , is ready to see the light of day .
6 If they are , your phone call will merely be a slight irritant , but if there is no appropriate slot at that particular time your call could cause enough irritation to prevent the material ever seeing the light of day .
7 But the project still has n't seen the light of day .
8 There 's so much good stuff that has never seen the light of day .
9 This you have in common with the rest of the zodiac but Virgos , in particular , will discover aspects and talents within themselves that have not yet seen the light of day .
10 Instead , we shall zoom in on the ‘ new boys ’ two of which are far from new and have not seen the light of day for many a long year .
11 But above all it is there that René Jacobs 's enthusiastic reconstructions of Monteverdi 's dramatic works have seen the light of day .
12 For example , the minority view would have prevailed in Donoghue v. Stevenson [ 1932 ] A.C. 562 ; our modern law of judicial review would have never developed from its old , ineffectual , origins ; and Mareva injunctions would never have seen the light of day .
13 Never once during that time had they seen the light of day .
14 So the book , or one of the books , which Eliot wanted me to write has not yet seen the light of day .
15 A larger proportion of middle-period Byrd has seen the light of day the songs always excepted but never in recitals that attempt to plot stylistic progress .
16 The sources , who have seen Viking in action , say that the thing works , and may even perform ahead of expectations when it eventually sees the light of day .
17 Sadly , for it was a lively , largely autobiographical piece , it would never see the light of day .
18 John Franklin , director of corporate finance at the merchant bank Morgan Grenfell , whose clients include both societies and prospective bidders , is convinced a bid for a society is on the way : ‘ The first merger will see the light of day early next year . ’
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 The Feminine Mystique , which dared to put the silent question , did not see the light of day until 1963 , when it sold three million copies , but it was already being written and its audience was waiting .
21 ‘ We all know about criminal cases and traffic offences , but there are many aspects of the work of the Magistrates Court which do not see the light of day as far as the general public are concerned , for example juvenile and matrimonial cases .
22 Many of Brindley 's ideas were regarded as the hair-brained schemes of a madman which would never see the light of day .
23 A version of Gladys Knight 's ‘ Take Me In Your Arms And Love Me ’ , another ragga collaboration , this time featuring the vocal talents of Sweetie Irie , should see the light of day in the summer .
24 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 .
25 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 .
26 Get to the back of the drawers and cupboards — areas which do n't often see the light of day .
27 You will probably never see the light of day again ! ’
28 Discs , may never actually see the light of day .
29 Ousley says CDS is very interested in some massively parallel project that NEC is currently working on , though that wo n't see the light of day until the mid-1990s .
30 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 .
  Next page