Example sentences of "see [prep] [noun sg] 1 " in BNC.
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1 | Her symptoms continued and she underwent laparotomy , which showed enlargement of the pyloric and duodenal lymph nodes , with granulomatous changes similar to those seen in case 1 on biopsy . |
2 | In such surveys , however , such as that of 100 primary schools implementing the national curriculum , the conclusion was that as long ago as autumn 1989 " the best work seen in year 1 classes fully met , and went beyond , the requirements of the National Curriculum attainment targets and programmes of study in the core subjects " ( HMI 1990 ) . |
3 | Results can be seen in Fig. 1 . |
4 | The CO adsorption heat at higher potassium coverages reveals very different behaviour , as is seen in Fig. 1 for K =0.3 monolayers . |
5 | The CC' loops correspond precisely , but the FG loop in domain 2 lacks the β- bulge and accompanying twist seen in domain 1 . |
6 | As was seen in Chapter 1 , the main debate here has revolved around how to explain the long waves . |
7 | As we have already seen in Chapter 1 , the proportion of the temporary labour force who consider themselves self-employed ( 15 per cent ) is rather higher than that of the workforce as a whole ( 11 per cent ) . |
8 | Indeed , in this latter case a casual and a short-term contract worker are in many ways indistinguishable , since , as we have seen in Chapter 1 , it is only after four weeks employment that a worker is entitled to a minimum period of notice . |
9 | As we have already seen in chapter 1 for butane and polyethylene , steric repulsions impose restrictions to bond rotation . |
10 | As already seen in Chapter 1 , possession and ownership in English law are normally " exclusive " , that is , they involve " Keep off ! " actions and attitudes towards the property and towards other people . |
11 | As can be seen in Table 1 , throughout this century there has been a large decline in private renting , and a corresponding increase in owner-occupation and council housing , which began to get under way after the First World War . |
12 | The causal picture ( seen in Figure 1 ) becomes complicated . |
13 | As can be seen in Figure 1 , the inducible complex obtained with each of the three probes ( shown by the dark arrow ) can not be ‘ supershifted ’ or inhibited by using anti-IL-6DBP antibodies . |
14 | As seen in figure 1 , all species competed with labelled ds LTR for binding to NCp7 . |
15 | The reason for raising here the complexities of inflation , and savings as an alternative , is that as can be seen from Appendix 1 . |
16 | As can be seen from Fig. 1 the resulting series appears to be a reasonable proxy for ‘ Big Bang ’ related effects . |
17 | This is not the case , as can be seen from Table 1 , even in terms of simple numerical trend . |
18 | As it can be seen from Table 1 , expert systems have certain fundamental disadvantages against human experts . |
19 | For example , suppose that the prevailing level of income were £50 million : as can be seen from Table 1 , this would mean that £50 million worth of goods and services were being produced when aggregate demand was only £46 million . |
20 | Looking first at the data obtained at 37°C a clear footprint can be seen around site 1 ( positions 32-38 ) in the sequence CGCA , which is still apparent 30 seconds after adding the unlabelled DNA . |
21 | As can be seen by figure 1 , the number of households headed by women in Latin America and the Caribbean , accounts for 25 per cent of the region 's households , and in Africa 17 per cent , whilst those of the developed regions only account for 20 per cent . |
22 | As you can see from Figure 1 , Mrs A. has a healthy surplus income of £105.16 each month . |
23 | Gassendi begins by addressing a question first raised by the Greek sceptics , as we saw in Chapter 1 . |
24 | Yet we saw in Chapter 1 that plants are the source of almost all life on Earth ; they alone can create the organic molecules which the animals consume . |
25 | Led by Robert E. Park , this group of researchers , as we saw in chapter 1 , devoted their research efforts to detailed studies of their own city . |
26 | We saw in Chapter 1 that there was no logical reason for classical criminology 's omission of individual , social and economic factors . |
27 | The title ‘ administrative criminology ’ is of significance in that it is the title that Vold gave to the classical criminology of Beccaria and Bentham ( as we saw in Chapter 1 ) . |
28 | We saw in Chapter 1 that , in Britain , there is some dispute as to when rehabilitation began to make serious inroads into penal practice : Foucault saw it as manifesting itself in the rise of the prison as the dominant penal institution ; Garland puts it much later , in the early part of this century . |
29 | As we saw in Chapter 1 , there are unresolved conflicts between Beccaria 's fundamental assumptions about the nature of human beings , the social contract and the functions of punishment , on the one hand , and the particular mode of control that he derives from them , on the other . |
30 | They are part of the conception of human rationality which , as we saw in Chapter 1 , is one of the starting assumptions of classical criminology . |