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

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1 As a result of seeing part of knowledge as the whole , ‘ rationalists ’ , Oakeshott contends , over-estimate their abilities to define and solve problems , whereas reason proper indicates the need for caution in assessing the scope of human capability .
2 I was to see Loch of Strathbeg .
3 Have you seen Imitation of Life ?
4 They will be seen partaking of hospitality at college wine-and-cheese parties , at welcoming sherry receptions , at meetings of convocation and examination boards , at end-of-term wind-up parties and graduation celebrations .
5 I can see part of Horse Guards Parade almost see myself standing there the other afternoon , looking up at these windows , still ignorant of what I was looking at .
6 Cos what he does , he puts a tea bag in a cup pours about that much water on takes the tea bag out and tops it right up with water so he can see bottom of cup .
7 Dan do n't you wan na come and see Body of Evidence tomorrow ?
8 He did not see size of firm as a particularly important factor in his choice .
9 ‘ Any authority which sees abrogation of responsibility to drug users as an option is badly advised . ’
10 Against those iconoclasts who would rid life of all images in the name of religion , he sees repudiation of art as acceptable for the extreme ascetic , but , if universally applied , as starving the spiritual soil of nourishment .
11 I 'm annoyed to see Head of Department for Art offered on Scale 2 nowadays , within Arts Faculties . ’
12 The biggest single reason for refusal of certification being recommended is that the subject assessor is unable to see evidence of student performance .
13 Lupold was never acceptable to the pope ( to whom he remained the bishop of Worms who had transferred himself to Mainz without papal licence ) and when at the end of 1204 Philip saw hope of victory he made a bad move by sending Lupold to Italy .
14 Among the items which therefore never saw light of day was one in which I suggested that there were individual candidates of all the parties in different parts of the country whom one might be tempted to vote for on purely personal grounds .
15 Weber also saw ownership of wealth as an important criterion for distinguishing classes .
16 Having intellectual origins in Owenite socialism , pioneer cooperators saw control of distribution as a means toward the abolition of capitalism , or in minimal terms , a major shift in the balance of power and wealth .
17 This period also saw expansion of motor-car ownership which led to both the provision of more and better roads and other traffic-related expenditure .
18 At the outset the book recognises that ‘ the United Kingdom does not have a monopoly on the best ideas or all of the problems ’ , so it is not a surprise to see discussion of Woonerven in the context of environmental protection and enhancement .
19 In the order of events this afternoon you see part of Psalm one hundred and three printed there which is part of the commendation at the occasion of the funerals of the departed .
20 See Department of Health Circular 83(22) ( Estate management : underused and surplus property in the NHS ) for further comment on the property condition and use surveys to be completed by health authorities by June 1984 .
21 The whole procedure by 1988 was officially seen as no longer dealing adequately with the issues , as inflexible , slow , costly and in need of review ( see Department of Trade and Industry 1988c ) .
22 It is tempting to adopt the view that the husband should convey " as trustee " , thus implying that he himself has not incumbered the property ( see Law of Property Act 1925 , s76(1) ( f ) , Sched 2 , Pt VI ) .
23 Please see Faculty of Music entry .
24 Erm I du n no I think I might just go home and go out with Bonnie and Catherine and see Body of Evidence .
25 That control might be exercised on the basis of considerations of sovereignty ; some countries in the civil law tradition see service of process as an act of State , an exercise of its judicial power , and are reluctant to permit within their borders an expression of the sovereignty of another State ; in Switzerland service on behalf of the plaintiff of foreign process without the permission of the Swiss authorities appears to be an offence punishable by imprisonment ( and even , theoretically , solitary confinement and hard labour ) 11 .
26 This wholly fails to take into account the sensitivities of those in the civil law tradition who see service of process as implying on judicial sovereignty .
27 Abbreviations see legend of Fig. 3 .
28 For abbreviations and references see legend of Fig. 2 .
29 Jury see replay of death hit
30 ( See use of flap on take-off on pages 93 and 94 . )
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