Example sentences of "see [prep] [noun sg] 2 " in BNC.

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1 This decay can also be seen in Fig 2 , which shows the probability of a single letter being recalled in its correct position after various time delays .
2 This can be clearly seen in Fig. 2 d obtained by a direct transform of LEED I-V spectra in which a non-normal incident beam was directed along the axis between the O atom and one of Ni atoms in the first layer .
3 The nitric acid amount as measured inside the vortex reaches its lowest levels of 1.1x10 16 molecule cm -2 near day 287 , and it can be seen in Fig. 2 that this coincides with minimum ozone amounts of about 140Dobson units ( DU ) .
4 As was seen in Chapter 2 , CAB volunteers expressly state that helping other people is an important part of the job satisfaction of an advice worker .
5 Such data can be of positive use in detecting local trends and issues , as was seen in Chapter 2 .
6 This is what masonry is about and as we have seen in Chapter 2 , starting with the simple wall one can go from the arch to the dome and to the most complicated cathedral , keeping everything in compression , or at least trying to do so .
7 At Powick the strongly centrist mode of operation meant that the health authority and local authority service framework adopted was built on assumptions about needs that were established wisdom ( though whose , as was seen in Chapter 2 , was not clear ) .
8 From a surplus of £385 million in 1970 , Britain had reached an annual deficit of £3,410 million by 1979 , as seen in Chapter 2 .
9 As seen in Table 2 , the effect of maternal age changed , in Hungary , as the level of infant mortality declined .
10 A similar picture can be seen from Chart 2 which shows how we are perceived in terms of providing ‘ high rates of interest for savings ’ .
11 As can be seen from Figure 2 , the macula is a minute area in the centre of the retina .
12 As can be seen from Figure 2 , the normal eye is virtually round , which means that rays of light coming from outside the eye are focused on the retina .
13 As can be seen from table 2 , practical exercises ought to be one of the best methods for library user education .
14 It can be seen from Table 2 in Chapter 17 that consumption spending accounted for over two-thirds of total expenditure in the United Kingdom in 1987 and consequently is a very important component of aggregate demand .
15 As can be seen from Table 2 , which shows figures from the United Kingdom Family Expenditure Survey of 1986 , the apc has a marked tendency to fall as we move from lower to higher income groups ; also , the apc is greater than the mpc in every case .
16 Also , although ashamed as we can see in Act 2 Scene 6 , lines 30–32 and 34–40 , her simple carrying out of the deed is immoral and dishonest .
17 As we shall see in chapter 2 , careful sampling methods have been devised to try to ensure representativeness in survey research , but many other methods do not involve systematic sampling , and there must always be a question as to the representativeness of their findings and conclusions .
18 And so it was for Wirral , for , as we shall see in Chapter 2 , the Index was collecting ‘ epidemic ’ data but its guardians did not recognise or communicate the fact .
19 As we shall see in Chapter 2 , we can distinguish different types of social structure which systematically generate unequal distributions of power and reward .
20 As we shall see in Chapter 2 , this claim has now become less plausible and less acceptable .
21 Yet , as we shall see in Chapter 2 , this is not invariably the case .
22 At high levels of recursion the pattern becomes quite elaborate , but you can easily see in Figure 2 that it is still produced by the same very simple branching rule .
23 As you will see from Diagram 2 , clear air is no longer important , as long as you are in a position to tack when ready .
24 What else is there to see in Hut 2 ?
25 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 .
26 As we saw in Chapter 2 , water has a very high specific heat , which means it takes a lot of heat to change the temperature of the sea significantly ; and in cold conditions , the oceans are slow to cool off .
27 As we saw in Chapter 2 , such prices are sometimes referred to as ‘ cost-plus ’ prices .
28 The trouble is , as we saw in Chapter 2 , that time is the one resource par excellence that teachers feel short of .
29 As we saw in Chapter 2 , in his criticism of subcultural theory Matza favoured a return to the less deterministic , less differentiated view of the criminal that was characteristic of classical criminology though , in his later work ( Matza , 1969 ) he moved to a more fully indeterminist view .
30 The most quantitatively significant development in terms of content this century has not been rehabilitation but deterrence ( through the massive expansion in the use of the fine , as we saw in Chapter 2 ) .
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