Example sentences of "i [verb] you [modal v] see " in BNC.

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1 and when we and when we were dredging that up , that used to be all like er er trunks of trees and you could , I mean you could see it when they come up it was very light .
2 No , but I mean you could see play really well .
3 fair point , its still er , I mean its a considerable number , I mean you can see why the insurance company 's are doing quite well , but your willing to put up with that as well for the , for the good points of a car , for the freedom that er , that cars give you and the safety someone has said , the individual safety as a woman , yes .
4 Erm , it , what it struck me as is a parallel with Freud 's idea of transference , you know that once something happens in the , in the traumatic period in a , in a childhood , there 's then a tendency to transference to occur later in life , we recreate later in relationships to er the model of the early one and er it struck me that what you said about French industrial relations sounded a bit like transference in erm in the psychoanalysis the idea that i i it spills out as it were from the initial which might have been saved er within the family to other relationships i in later life that people have with their superiors at work or something I mean you can see this actually sometimes you know that people have relationships with their superiors which are clearly erm based on erm their relationships with their parents and they see the , th their boss as a parental figure and the employee sees themselves as er as , as , as a kind of erm child and it shows itself sometimes in quite er quite unmistakable ways .
5 the er , erm , so I mean , we really have made major strides and I think if members look at the location maps I mean you can see just how we how widely spread the day centres now are .
6 I mean you can see , it 's self evident as you travel to Strensall that that development has been highly successful and s and the s the final seventh point is that the A sixty four north east corridor can be well served by the public transport to achieve the close relationship between the workplace and home , as national policy now seeks .
7 Even from er the quality of the brochure I mean you can see you know I mean that 's quite high level
8 As Maggie 's talking to me I mean you can see like my here I mean I 've got all sorts , as you would use that , those pages for , there 's notes as I 'm going through of things that we were doing and er the university and , and everything like that and there 's other parts of it that , I mean the , the things that you would come back to and elaborate more on
9 Well I mean you can see from the stats , the figures and routes they fly that we get ten per cent when we should be getting twenty
10 I mean you can see how they live , I mean look at the roads .
11 I mean you can see that bloke stopping cos he saw this poor girl lying in the road .
12 I mean you must see it yourself .
13 I mean you 'd see it going round the town quite regularly emptying the gullies .
14 Here I hope you will see some evidence of the high moral purpose with which the government of France is endeavouring to fulfil its civilizing mission . "
15 As she stepped further into the boatyard , she thought : I hope you can hear me , Pascoe , and I hope you can see me clearly from the tree , because I can smell the tiger .
16 In conclusion , I hope you can see the enormous challenge fundholding is posing , and how it is an opportunity to make the health service responsive to our needs as general practitioners acting on behalf of our patients .
17 I know you can see the trees , the view from the window or the picture on the wall — but when was the last time you really looked at them ?
18 I believe you can see why , first of it it 's most common , and second to coronary artery disease , I 'm a cardiac surgeon , I want my piece of the action too , so we keep as well .
19 In his acceptance speech he made three predictions : ‘ I believe you will see tonight that Britain will have returned strongly to three-party politics again .
20 ‘ Talking of parents , I suppose you must see something of Kate 's mother .
21 I suppose you can see the connexion .
22 ‘ From your flat I suppose you can see the back of Benson 's where Francis was killed . ’
23 the slot in it , so I mean really that one up there is a , a bit of an ornament , never used , I suppose you can see why because er
24 I knew you would see reason in the end .
25 I knew you 'd see it , me boy , ’ his father smiled , putting an arm round his eldest 's shoulder .
26 I knew you 'd see it my way . ’
27 ‘ Good , I thought you 'd see it my way .
28 Building on this approach and something which I think you 'll see certainly during the course of your your medical studies antibodies directed against tumourler proce , tumourler process factor are now being used to try and interrupt the chain of events at a slightly later stage .
29 Try and do the sums as it were and think it through , and if you do that , I think you 'll see that er , it does work out this way And of course , it gets er , even worse if you consider questions like relatedness through parents , because clearly I may be related to my mother 's sister 's children , my cousins , er no it 's actually nieces , because my mother and her sister share genes , but I 'm not er necessarily related erm in the same way , erm , through er , my father 's er relatives , for example , because although erm , because my er , my , my relationship between mother 's kin and my father 's kin is purely through marriage , so they have no joint genetic relatedness .
30 The police service themselves recognize that there has to be a a need for change that they have to be brought up to date er and er I think you 'll see when I a announce my decisions on the Sheahy report er that er I am taking the need to er reform the police service , very seriously indeed .
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