Example sentences of "see [noun prp] [num] for " in BNC.

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1 Political philosophy is more concerned with objects as properties than the properties of objects , while phenomenology , as that branch or philosophy which claims more direct concern with everyday objects , considers these mainly as media for addressing the role of agency and the nature of subjectivity ( though see McCarthy 1984 for the contribution of Mead ) .
2 Rustin ( 1985 ) notes that Scruton places undue emphasis on the referential approach to language in semiotics , ignoring the equally powerful structuralist component ( see Sperber 1975 for a parallel comment on anthropology ) .
3 Despite these encouraging developments ( see Potts 1987 for a brief overview ) most of the aspirations of the Warnock committee in recommending the under-fives as a priority area remain unfulfilled , and there is a dearth of data on the effectiveness of integrating children with special educational needs in the pre-school years ( McGlynn and Phillips 1987 ) .
4 There have been fierce debates over the differences between objects as sign and as symbol , and over degrees of iconicity , most of which can be reduced to levels of abstraction involved in the process by which objects become vehicles of meaning ( see Lyons 1977 for survey ) .
5 It had been widely denounced as disastrous both for the environment and the local Auyu forest people , whose traditional lands would be devastated [ see ED 46 for a detailed account of the project ] .
6 Such an interpretation of the concept of " sustainable use " of wildlife has been so far resisted by most CITES members [ see ED 56 for details of the last CITES meeting , and the debate surrounding these issues ] .
7 [ see ED 23 for accident ; for legal action , see EDs 45 , 46 , 51 ] .
8 ’ An examination of these five kinds of sacrifice , and of the system of belief underlying these two statements , reveals a symbolic world in which aggression and tranquillity are viewed as opposing principles held in uncertain balance by ritual action ( see Gibson 1986 for a full account ) .
9 Piaget , however , asserts in the introduction to his work that ‘ We shall rather show that the acquisition of language is itself subordinated to the workings of a symbolic function which can be seen in the development of imitation and play as well as in that of verbal mechanisms ’ ( 1962 : 1–2 ; see Vygotsky 1978 for a contrary view ) .
10 The second in our Jazz series ( see November 10 for Jazz 1 ) , featuring the following artists : Salute to Duke Ellington ( 1950 ) : six numbers played by the Duke Ellington Band .
11 This norm contrasts with that of the groups ' careful speech which is very much closer to traditional Dyirbal ( see Dixon 1971 for a description ) .
12 For example , multiplex ties of work and friendship have emerged as powerful in this respect ( see Cohen 1982 for examples and L. Milroy 1980 for further references ) .
13 Deeply embedded in the local population and the majority of the labour leadership , it influenced political strategy on all important issues ( see Bush 1984 for most of the next two paragraphs ) .
14 The precise form this differentiation takes varies from community to community ; for example it is likely to be manifested differently in pre- and post-industrial societies and to vary in accordance with culturally determined roles assigned by societies ( see Coates 1986 for a general discussion of the issues ) .
15 Third , the ‘ bureaucratic bourgeoisie ’ , inflated in numbers and enjoying large incomes by African standards , paid for by copper exports , is in control of the state apparatus and decision-making ( see Szeftel 1980 for a more detailed and sophisticated analysis ) .
16 ( See Thompson 1984 for a discussion . )
17 ( See Klovstad 1976 for a full description . )
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