Example sentences of "as we see [adv] " in BNC.

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1 But there have not been many games with such drama as we saw here today .
2 As we saw above , for them one of the commonest mistakes of the crude materialism which they criticize is to think that men deal with the world simply as it is ; as it would be defined by physics or biology .
3 This condition is , as we saw above , weaker than that required by the main argument for the validation of authority .
4 When , which means , as we saw above , we shall show that increases , so the preceding BFS can not recur in this case , either , since and are uniquely determined by the basis ( and ) .
5 Bloch 's work ( 1975 ) on political language and oratory , as we saw above ( p. 41 ) , provides evidence of ways in which speech is formalised in non-literate and in literate societies alike and is used for the functions which Goody attributes to writing alone .
6 As we saw above , and Lyons would not disagree , it is mostly in the paralinguistic features that English performs this function .
7 Even if these differences did tell us something about differences in attention to ‘ objectivity ’ , this would not necessarily be the same as attainment of ‘ objectivity ’ , as we saw above in relation to ‘ academic language ’ .
8 As we saw above , there are limitations with the rational model as a method of solving problems .
9 The main principle of collective struggle in modernity ( and in the fields ) , as we saw above , was that concerning heresy and orthodoxy .
10 From 5bn in 1980 , assets have grown , as we saw above , to over 35bn by 1987 .
11 As we saw above , assets in 1987 amounted to over 35bn .
12 The concept of structure also has its risks and its dangers , even though it appears to be based on the idea of relations as opposed to entities or determining origins ( as we saw above in the discussion of the Prague School ) .
13 As we saw above , it is based on the process of linking together multimedia data elements and allowing users different options for getting from one to another .
14 Temperature is , as we saw above , a state function .
15 Where verbs of perception and know , as we saw above , evoke a characteristic expressive effect in this context , it is more difficult to see any nuance characterizing make here , other than perhaps a suggestion of result .
16 Thus , as we saw above , the only way to help sponsor something is to sponsor it in part by contributing money oneself .
17 As we saw above , Friedman went further : the natural unemployment rate was also a stable equilibrium unemployment rate in the sense that deviations from the natural rate , produced , typically , by misguided monetary policies , would only be transitory .
18 As we saw just now in that passage in Isaiah 63 , the Spirit is the personal expression of God himself , and can be grieved : he is holy , not only the divine power but the moral character of God : he is God in action for the benefit of his people — notice how the Spirit is equated with the ‘ arm ’ of Yahweh , that is to say his saving activity .
19 Reading across from £789 , we find B would value this at about the equivalent of £410 , whilst the alternative certainty equivalent under contract 1 is £400 , as we saw previously ( because the owner gets £0 or £1000 under contract 1 ) .
20 It is , as we saw clearly during the Gulf war , the very sophistication of America 's procurement and the new technology of weaponry that demand that we count the Americans as friends and allies rather than trying to go it alone .
21 Eleanor , Aveling and Liebknecht wrote to another , We have never seen in Europe such wanton interference on the part of the police with the liberty of the subject as we saw today in a country proverbially known as ‘ the land of the free ’ .
22 As we saw there , Segal and Irigaray have recently elaborated this view , but its origins are clearly in Freud whose early case-studies , as Mitchell observes , originate the idea that ‘ the homosexual was choosing not another of the same sex , but himself in the guise of another ’ ( Psychoanalysis and Feminism , 34 ; see e.g. Freud , ix .
23 As we saw back in section 12.5 , the building-up of reserves counts as a deficit ( an outflow from the balance of payments account to the reserves account ) .
24 Then , as we saw recently , various MPs start to behave in a very silly way .
25 But a conflict between objectives — as we saw early in 1988 — may re-emerge the moment it is clear the economy is really slowing .
26 Increasingly , threats come from outside Europe — as we saw so clearly in the Gulf .
27 As we saw earlier , in this and the first chapter , this theory holds that things are a combination of form and matter , and it is by appeal to their form that one would hope to explain why things have the properties they do .
28 Hitler himself had lent support to such optimism , as we saw earlier , in his speech on 30 September 1942 , by stating emphatically that German troops would ‘ overrun Stalingrad and take it ’ .
29 The ‘ Jewish Question ’ is not touched upon in a single major public address by Hitler in this period of the ‘ seizure ’ and consolidation of power — a time , as we saw earlier , in which his popularity was greatly extended and the ‘ Führer myth ’ massively enhanced .
30 As we saw earlier , the extreme emotions of the horse are quite clear as they involve the whole horse ; but the same emotions in a more moderate form , or of lesser intensity , like apprehension or annoyance , will reveal themselves differently in different horses ; and the horse owner really has to learn them from the movement , gestures , and noises that the horse makes , and the context in which they are made .
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