Example sentences of "looked at [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 When looked at on a year-to-year basis , our diets may very little .
2 But looked at from a Roman point of view , the papacy is not one system of Church government among others .
3 This evolutionary argument appeals to continuities between humans and other animals , looked at from a human point of view .
4 ‘ I thing it is my forte to take something like a relationship , and then examine it and mirror it in different songs , it 's actually the same relationship but looked at from a different way .
5 Details of the experiments themselves do not concern us here , but some of the ideas that have emerged from them are of interest because they add further to our understanding of how , looked at from a biological perspective , creativity can be connected to psychosis .
6 Here are some of the main basic devices : [ quote ] Looked at in a cold light , most of these devices seem pretty silly , if not worse .
7 The textbook picture of the lower part of the Lower jurassic in England , looked at in the usual two-dimensional textbook way , along the outcrop , is of thinning over three axes with thicker basins of sedimentation in between ( figure 3.2a ) .
8 It shows how these different styles are likely to have a marked effect on the crime statistics collected by particular police forces , an issue we looked at in the previous chapter on criminal statistics .
9 Then you tell the story of the murder and the subsequent investigation , adroitly working in the fact that there was a red light shining at the vital time and place , using one of the ways of tricking your reader into " noticing and not noticing " this that we looked at in the previous chapter , and you also harp like mad on the impossibility of a person in a black dress or suit having been on hand at the moment the murder was committed .
10 We can see the similarities here between the scientific approach to organisations and its similarity to bureaucracy that we looked at in the previous chapter .
11 The other half ‘ with thee I am well pleased ’ comes from that picture of the Servant of Yahweh in Isaiah 42:1 which we looked at in the last chapter .
12 Braverman ( 1974 ) argues that scientific management and the work of individuals such as F. W. Taylor , that we looked at in an earlier chapter , encouraged the development of the control of the worker by management and that the transformation of work advocated by scientific management led to the de-skilling and to the degradation of the worker .
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