Example sentences of "can see [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I find many compositions on hills or high vantage points from where you can see into the far distance .
2 Beside Lio ! rt was another figure , visible only to those who can see into the extra four dimensions of magic .
3 From where I stand I can see through the half-open doors of the ward , the long lines of white beds , the charts , the flowers on the central table , whose scent fails to mask the smell of antiseptics as flowers on the bench must have failed to hide the smell of humanity from the judge in less sterile days .
4 ‘ I lived in America for a long time and I can see through the glossy image-making of his campaign , I think .
5 Then he cleans the bed of needles and berries , spreads an old blanket over it , stretches himself at length , his hands folded under his head , and looks through the branches at what he can see of the blue sky .
6 yes , as far as I can see with the other one 's
7 The town you can see on the other side of the bay is Grange over Sands .
8 On the other hand we did want to keep it medieval looking on the inside , so what we did was we installed these Yorkshire sliding casement but on the inside as you can see at the top window , we put panel window .
9 All I can see beneath the sweet-scented tangle above the living-room window is darkness within .
10 It gets its name from what you can see in the far distance , provided the weather is right , which is the first peaks of the real Pyrenees .
11 The technique is easy , as you can see in the bottom right-hand corner of the picture .
12 ‘ We can see in the American financial world where you end up when risks are underestimated , or not taken account of quickly enough in the results . ’
13 This means that multi-dimensional scaling has applications in many areas of work , as we can see from the following examples .
14 The reality is in fact much much broader than this , and as you can see from the following list , there are a wealth of opportunities providing care and comfort for all sectors of the population .
15 We can see from the annual average figures that sterling 's effective exchange rate has fallen since 1975 ( 1975 = 100 ) and in 1987 it averaged 72.6 — depreciation of 27 per cent .
16 By the tenth century we can see from the detailed boundary clauses contained in charters that the earlier estate arrangements are already becoming obscure .
17 We can see from the Unemployed Flow Survey that the proportion of people finding work within 10 months of registration as job seekers who took temporary jobs varied with the level of unemployment in their area .
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