Example sentences of "we see [prep] [noun sg] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 As we saw in Part II , this has not been the case with child language , where both comprehension and production have been extensively studied , with comparisons being made between the child 's spontaneous use and understanding of particular linguistic forms .
2 As we saw in Part I , the opposite has occurred .
3 The main rhythm part of this example is very similar to the walking bass idea that we saw in fig 2 of last month 's article .
4 As we saw in Lecture 6 , distortions may lead the ranking of sectors according to physical capital intensity ( A* ) to differ from that according to factor shares ( ) .
5 As we saw in Lecture 3 , the effect on savings could go either way ; this could strengthen or diminish the equalizing effect on the coefficient of variation of lifetime consumption .
6 But , as we saw in Chapter 5 , genetic evolution too may proceed as a series of brief spurts between stable plateaux .
7 As we saw in Chapter 5 , your freedom to move elsewhere may be limited in a number of ways .
8 Although incomes in the 1980s were substantially higher in real terms than they were at the end of the 1950s , there has been no sustained decrease in inequality ; in fact , as we saw in chapter 5 ( figure 5.5 ) , income inequality in Britain increased sharply after 1976 .
9 Animals obey orders , the guard-dog does its duty , but as we saw in Chapter 5 , such attributions involve a language-game only reminiscent of the human paradigm .
10 As we saw in Chapter 5 , the buying and selling of foreign currencies by the Bank of England , using sterling , can have an effect on the domestic money stock .
11 But we saw in Chapter 5 that , as key institutions in the modern state , institutions of higher education can not attain a position of pure autonomy .
12 As we saw in Chapter 5 , he suggested that the style adopted depends upon the perception that leaders have of their subordinates .
13 As we saw in Chapter 5 , McGregor argued that the style of management adopted is a function of the manager 's attitudes and assumptions about human nature .
14 As we saw in Chapter 14 , Michel Foucault argues that before the nineteenth century the sodomite was someone who performed a certain kind of act ; no specific identity was attributed to , or assumed by , the sodomite .
15 As we saw in chapter two , the number and variety of messages with which the main character is bombarded causes her to reflect on the role they play in her daily life .
16 ( We saw in Chapter One how some thinkers have advocated utilitarianism in a consciously attitudinist spirit . )
17 Between 8 and 12 May , as we saw in Chapter One , 5 Corps had taken the surrender of six groups originating from territories controlled by the Soviet Union .
18 As we saw in Chapter 4 , the London Evening News accused him of trying to subvert the ‘ wholesome , manly , simple ideals of English life ’ , and connected his sexual perversion with intellectual and moral subversion .
19 As we saw in Chapter 4 , your contract may cater for a wide variety of perks , such as :
20 As we saw in Chapter 4 the stress concentration at the tip of a crack is about : Now in many materials , R , the tip radius of the crack , remains constant whatever the crack length , so that as the crack gets longer , the stress concentration gets worse .
21 We saw in Chapter 4 that the academic community is built around a structured conversation , with its members adhering to certain norms : they are truth seeking ; they are sincere in their utterances ; they offer understandable propositions ; and they adopt appropriate forms of communication .
22 That , as we saw in Chapter 4 , is the nature of truth : it is a continuing discourse , in which rival views are taken forward .
23 As we saw in Chapter 4 , the logical schema proves to be a useful stage for database design and separates the conceptual model , which is independent of any hardware/software factors , from the physical model .
24 We saw in chapter 4 that mixtures may be homogeneous , in which case they exist as a single phase , or they may be heterogeneous .
25 As we saw in chapter 8 , a logistic transformation can help straighten out a flat S-shaped curve ( figure 8.5 ) .
26 We saw in Chapter 8 that Garrett 's model of sentence production does contain these two components ; and the examples of spontaneous speech by aphasic patients we gave in sections 9.2.1 and 9.2.2 illustrate the two patterns which occur if one of the components is damaged and the other spared .
27 As we saw in Chapter 10 , intermediate forms of imperfect competition require some economies of scale to limit the number of firms an industry can support .
28 As we saw in Chapter 17 , the authorities in the UK recognize the difficulties in controlling the money supply directly .
29 As we saw in Chapter 17 , aggregate demand consists of consumption , investment , government spending , exports minus imports ( that is , AD = C + I + C + X - M ) .
30 As we saw in Chapter III , that a person does a particular job , lives in a particular town or is a vegetarian is usually regarded as a contingent fact about them .
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