Example sentences of "[adv] can be see [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | That this is so can be seen by contrasting sentences such as those evoked in Chapter 1 and repeated here : ( 1a ) I had nine people to call . |
2 | He was responsible for shaping the material at his disposal into an effective unity , and the success with which he did so can be seen in the cohesion of the retinue in 1483 . |
3 | He was responsible for shaping the material at his disposal into an effective unity , and the success with which he did so can be seen in the cohesion of the retinue in 1483 . |
4 | The singularity occurs when , and thus can be seen to be associated with the focusing singularity in region IV . |
5 | They commonly cut across preexisting grain and cement boundaries ( Fig. 5.39b ) and thus can be seen to post-date all phases they traverse . |
6 | The ability to communicate extra-sensorily can be seen as a sort of literary emblem of that which is fundamentally beyond expression . |
7 | The mutual dependency expressed here can be seen in an almost completely uncritical reading experience . |
8 | In both of these there can be seen by the 1880s and 1890s an anxious defensiveness , a feeling that the nation 's value and importance must be asserted in the face of more successful rivals . |
9 | The Renaissance then can be seen as an addition to the early modern period . |
10 | There are few examples of their being scattered extensively and repeatedly used within a single text ; where this does happen , as for instance in Les quatre Souhais Saint Martin , the practice can readily be justified by its thematic significance ( on which see further below ) , as again can be seen to be the case with the cornucopia of excrement that Robin drops on to the deservedly victimized Jouglet . |
11 | So , er er aggression again can be seen as a demand placed on the ego by the id , or for erm release as it were , when an ego erm goes and does something that , that releases the aggression . |
12 | It consisted of a line of timber post-built ‘ halls ’ and numerous sunken-floored buildings ; there is no formal plan and little can be seen of streets or boundaries . |
13 | Little can be seen in the darkness . |