Example sentences of "[Wh det] looks to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 What he does have , though , is a fearsome grip on the band which looks to me like a dictatorship and which he maintains is just the way things have worked out .
2 Despite the drawings , only a glimpse of the richness of Wilkie 's art is shown , a fine example being an oil sketch of ‘ The Death of Sir Philip Sidney ’ , which looks to early Titian in colour and feeling .
3 For somewhat like Althusser , Foucault defends a ‘ discursive determinism ’ which looks to a wide range of institutions and academic disciplines as the determinants of conceptions of agency .
4 Between times there are two other little Intel numbers that have to be accounted for : the P54 , which could be a P5 in 80486 clothing but we 're not sure yet , and the P67 , which looks to be a 1994 transition chip between the P6 and P7 .
5 My conclusions are that work which looks to family law as instrument is inadequate ; the ‘ school-rules concept ’ of law overlooks law 's part in representing and naturalizing ‘ the way things are ’ ; law 's self-denying ordinance in relation to the personal and the private is a cultural construct and not an inevitable element of ideas of law or justice .
6 A ‘ high ’ Christology is one which emphasizes Christ 's divinity , a ‘ low ’ Christology his humanity , and a ‘ message ’ type Christology one which looks to his words rather than to the nature of his person .
7 Although this turned out be the quietest piece of the whole site , at the far extreme a very small hammered coin came to light which looks to be 16th/17th century and of Italian or Papal States origin .
8 The Madeiran does , however , excel at parking his car in what looks to be an impossible place .
9 We called Aries Research Inc , makers of what looks to be the first HyperSparc-based systems ( UX No 426 ) Marixx.ds and Marixx.dt , Aries Technology .
10 Several species have what looks to be a cut-water on the keel of the shell and may even have sailed like galleons across the surface of the prehistoric oceans .
11 Increasingly , the involvement of organisms , especially microorganisms , in mediating these processes has become apparent , and Widdel and colleagues ( page 834 of this issue ) now come up with what looks to be a particularly remarkable example .
  Next page