Example sentences of "we [vb mod] see that [art] " in BNC.

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1 Erm the questions you were asking just now were testing a possible implication that this policy is so weak in general , no no not weak , so general in its application that it really does n't get in the way , it 's testing that kind of hypothesis , and erm all I can say is from experience in North Yorkshire that , even without this policy since nineteen eighty , the county has been using its assertion of its need to protect the countryside generally as its policy position to stop things happening outside towns and villages and that with this policy in place we could see that a general position of the county maintained and then reinforced .
2 We could see that the health of the person is directly tied in with the health of the planet . ’
3 As he approached we could see that the dog had been wounded : it was limping and the fur on its flank was matted with blood .
4 As far as we could see , ship after ship was anchored all down the outer loch , and as we progressed towards Ullapool we could see that the anchored ships extended right into the bay past Ullapool piers .
5 As we got closer , we could see that the Hall was a heavy , dark building with a large main entrance .
6 We shall see that an important feature of both the monetarist approach and our simple model is the so-called augmented Phillips curve .
7 We shall see that the Law of Property Act 1925 has changed the form of the ordinary legal mortgage ( see pp. 96–9 ) .
8 We shall see that the position has changed slightly , but encouragingly , since this challenge was given .
9 We shall see that the principal peculiarity of the English upper class is the survival of cultural and status characteristics from stages before industrial capitalism , and the continued dominance of non-industrial capital in powerful circles .
10 In section 6.5 , we shall see that the choice of one style of description , rather than the other , can have a substantial effect on learning .
11 the credit assignment problem and we shall see that the classification scheme set out in Chapter 1 does not always work perfectly .
12 We shall see that the conflicts between the different roles played by the judge in the political order persist today .
13 Although this is the position at common law , we shall see that the Consumer Credit Act 1974 radically alters the position with respect to conditional sale agreements regulated by its provisions , thus making them significantly different in effect from credit sale agreements .
14 But we shall see that the behaviour of financial institutions is often dominant .
15 We shall see that the problem arises because there is neither a market nor a market price for things like noise .
16 We shall see that the Chart does not force a commitment in any of the five areas of choice .
17 However , we shall see that the upshot of the monetarist position is : ( a ) that short-term demand management may do more harm than good ; ( b ) that there is a close relationship between changes in the money supply and changes in money national income in the long-run ; ( c ) that without government interference the economy will tend towards its ‘ natural ’ rate of unemployment .
18 We will see that a cleverly chosen transfer price will manipulate divisional managers into making the decisions that are best for the group as a whole .
19 In Section 8.2 we will see that the simplex method can be performed very efficiently for TRPs if we take the structure of the problem into account and we will start by examining the nature of BFSs .
20 We will see that the author of The Cloud of Unknowing and Walter Hilton both warn people against the dangers of his kind of mysticism .
21 Indeed we will see that the outcome of the Keynesian view is that monetary policy should be directed at interest rates , rather than the money supply , but that in any case monetary policy should be subsidiary to fiscal policy .
22 We can see that a horse 's physical needs , like food , will affect not only its health , but also its emotions ; and we can see , too , that denial of the horse 's psychological needs will only make life more difficult for ourselves .
23 From these answers we can see that a horse 's temperament may touch on all these statements , or their opposites , and that the horse 's temperament is demonstrated by its general or most consistent mood and natural disposition .
24 By inspection of ( 3 ) we can see that a column vector xi postmultiplying ( 2I — A ) to give a null result must be such that unc vanishes ; two obvious vectors achieving this are{ 1,2,4 ) and{ 1,0 , — 1 } .
25 If we now look at the curve which shows the freon ratios in surface water and look for a ratio of two , and lining this up with the nought degree curve because we 're working with Antarctic water which of course is very cold , we can see that a ratio of two corresponds to the year nineteen fifty nine .
26 Again from the Judicial Statistics 1989 , the table now looks like this : From these figures we can see that a high proportion of the cases disposed of in 1989 were personal injury actions ( 9,820 out of 12,859 ) hence the attention paid to this category of cases , and that in such cases for every 49 writs issued in 1989 , one case was determined by trial .
27 From the above passage we can see that an examination of the production , circulation and consumption of the total social product presents different problems from those posed by the movement of a single capital .
28 Thus we can see that an uncertainty exists about formal support for old people in the community which contrasts oddly with the general acceptance of accountability for those in residential care , even in the private sector .
29 From various other coins we can see that the pediment had three openings or windows and was decorated with four sculptural figures below a central Medusa head at the apex .
30 From the equipment , we can see that the Frankish horse soldier was in the earliest stages of development into the armed and armoured knight of later centuries .
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