Example sentences of "[Wh det] we [verb] [adv] see " in BNC.

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1 But I think it is reasonable as well as constructive to allude to the possibility that the human spirit is indeed evolving , that we are gradually ‘ widening the circle of compassion ’ , moving away from the narrower , more self-interested , more aggressive forms of social organisation to embrace the concept of one world in which we do indeed see ourselves as members of one human family .
2 Lévi-Strauss focuses on the ambivalence which we have already seen to be such a distinctive feature of the Critique , pointing in particular to Sartre 's vacillation between two concepts of dialectical reason .
3 The two strategies echo the structure of the argument which we have already seen used to legitimate public power and private power associated with the ordinary ownership of property .
4 By environment is meant all the factors that occur around us and potentially influence our internal metabolism , which we have already seen is initially determined by genetic make-up .
5 The earlier return of growth in these regions in the 1980s signalled a resumption of the urban-rural shift which we have already seen in population trends ( Chapter 4 ) .
6 But the madrigal was not merely a new art form — it had nothing in common with the trecento madrigal except the name — but a landmark in a revolution of which we have already seen the beginnings in the frottole and laudi spirituali and occasional passages in the Italian-influenced northerners from Dufay onward .
7 The cessation of the market process which we have already seen as characteristic of the equilibrium state is the cessation of a competitive process . [ … ]
8 We could n't believe what we had just seen . ’
9 What we 've just seen conjures up for me some positive messages of direct impact upon children and young people 's lives through our work in this country and overseas .
10 Now thinking about what we 've just seen how does that relate to that .
11 What we have already seen , however , ( p. 24 ) is that pre-exposure to the to-be-CS results in retarded development of the CR .
12 This loss is a result of what we have earlier seen Giddens calling ‘ time-space distantiation ’ : the increasing spread of social life over space and time .
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