Example sentences of "see for [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I see for Larbert the prospect of all the changes that I outlined in answer to the hon. Member for Glasgow , Garscadden ( Mr. Dewar ) .
2 To the modern reader the stipulated dress codes for different classes and persons of different prestige and status seem bizarre and impossibly complicated ( see for instance those reprinted in Jardine , Still Harping , 143 — 4 ) .
3 See for instance Painted Ports by A. G. Course ( Hollis and Carter , 1961 ) .
4 Though , parenthetically , I might note that there is plausible evidence enough to convince the most liberal of minds that such policies do operate ( see for instance , Lee and Wrench , 1981 ) .
5 See for instance Genesis 17:1f. ; 28:3f. ; 35:11 ; 43:14 ; 48:3 ; 49:25 .
6 In the New Testament it provides the terms in which the death of Jesus Christ is explained ( see for instance Hebrews 9:11ff . ) .
7 ( See for instance Wright 's chapter in Eggleston et al. ,
8 The correlations between occupational status , income , educational opportunity and attainment have been well-established ( see for instance Westergaard and Resler , 1975 ) , and it can be politically important to stress these systematic connections when opposing the notion that ‘ class inequality ’ is disappearing .
9 In normal circumstances , when an unlawful sentence is passed by the Crown Court the Court of Appeal can treat the sentence as a nullity and impose a lawful sentence in place of the unlawful sentence passed by the Crown Court ( see for instance Hollywood ( 1990 ) 12 Cr.App.R .
10 The development into ‘ girl-friendly science ’ or indeed ‘ girl-friendly schooling ’ in general , has engendered wide-ranging analyses of the way curricula are constructed , and of how schools could play a transformative rather than a reproductive role in gender identities for both sexes ( see for instance Kelly 1985 ) .
11 As the statistics in Table 8 indicate , heavy physical work during pregnancy ( see for instance the categories of unskilled labourers and unskilled construction workers ) more often lead to premature birth than conditions of other occupations .
12 See for instance ex.2e from the first quintet of Die Zauberflöte , where the forceful words ‘ Hass , Verleumdung , schwarzer Galle ’ ( ‘ hatred , calumny , black gall ’ ) are reflected by a similarly forceful hail-type articulation that is indicated by clear strokes for the violins .
13 The problem of incorporation of standard terms and conditions has been dealt with in a series of cases generally known as the " ticket cases " , which arose from the practice of printing terms and conditions on a variety of documents from railway or steamship tickets , to deck chair or swimming pool tickets , which were intended to govern the contract between the proprietor and the person using his services ( see for instance Parker v South Eastern Railway ( 1877 ) 2 CPD 416 , Hood v Anchor Line ( Henderson Brothers ) Ltd [ 1918 ] AC 837 , Chapelton v Barry UDC [ 1940 ] 1 KB 532 and Thornton v Shoe Lane Parking Ltd [ 1971 ] 2 QB 163 ) .
14 If such notice is required and not given , and the party has no actual knowledge of the terms and conditions , he can not be fixed with constructive knowledge of its existence ( see for instance Spurling ( J ) Ltd v Bradshaw [ 1956 ] 1 WLR 461 and Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Visual Programmes Ltd [ 1988 ] 2 WLR 615 ) .
15 From the cases , this seems to have been common practice in the nineteenth century : see for instance Re Carus-Wilson & Greene ( 1886 ) 18 QBD 7 , where there were two valuers and an umpire to value timber in a land sale .
16 Such an order has inheritance tax advantages ( if dissolution of the marriage has taken place ) , a saving in the HM Land Registry fees is available ( see Chapter 3 and generally ) and , as any financial provision can be expressed in the order to be in full and final settlement of the wife 's claims ( see Chapter 11 ) , it is less likely to be upset than an agreement between the parties not carried into a " consent order " ( see for instance Dinch v Dinch [ 1987 ] 1 WLR 252 where the court refused to make a further order on the grounds that the consent order had conclusively determined the rights of the parties in the matrimonial home ) .
17 right , now if you want to understand how to tie down , you just need to look at one or two tied in lines , and then you can , you can add , oh you can add your main lines what I 'm trying to say is , when it comes to , when it comes to , when it comes to , when it comes to selling , there 's a lot more than just what might you 've got , right , see I mean , I see for instance , you 've probably , you probably do n't , you probably do n't , you probably do n't go along right quite often right , people will buy what products can do with them , they do n't buy the products , are you with me ?
18 see for reliability
19 And there 's only fruit you see for afters .
20 On 19 March Pope John XXII reserved the see for John of Puzzuoli , chaplain of Edward II 's queen , Isabella [ q.v . ] .
21 Such a view of ‘ sociology ’ sets up another binary derived from the police preference for a Manichaean world created on homologies of ‘ good — evil ’ , and further reflects the ferocious resistance to and fear of change which permeates the organization ( see for example Weatheritt 1986 , Butler 1984 , and Adams 1988 ) .
22 Many of the Muslim women I spoke to told me that their husbands were unfaithful to them usually with white women ( see for example p. 123 of ‘ Sisters in Struggle ’ ) .
23 In the biblical narratives they appear as singers and dancers ( see for example , Exod.
24 The question must arise again now , if only because people have suggested that in order to improve the education of our children we need to move back to some system of selection ( see for example Whose Schools ?
25 Although the overall prevalence of moderate to severe dementia for those aged 65 and over in Britain can not be stated with accuracy ( because the several studies conducted in this country took place in different locations , at different times , with different types of sample , and using different measures and methods of assessment of dementia ; see for example Akhtar AM et al , 1973 ; Clarke et al , 1984 and ; 1986 ; Bergmann , 1971 ; Bond & Carstairs , 1982 ; Gruer , 1975 ; Gurland et al , 1983 ; Kay et al , 1964 & 1970 ; Maule et al , 1984 ; Williamson et al , l964 ) , it can be estimated as somewhere between one per cent and seven per cent of those aged 65 and over .
26 What is sure , however , is that prevalence rises markedly with age ( see for example Kay et al , 1970 ; Campbell et al , 1983 ; Maule et al , 1984 ) , and may affect as many as 20 per cent of people over the age of 80 .
27 But it is important to state that although in recent years in Britain , there have been many service innovations whose aim has been to improve the home or community care of elderly mentally frail people ( see for example Age Concern England , l983 ) , unfortunately most of these schemes have either not been systematically evaluated ( often because they have been very small in scale ) , or — if they have — results have not been widely disseminated .
28 Not surprisingly research has suggested a complexity of factors , and shown therefore the difficulties facing any attempts at alleviation ( see for example Eagles et al , l987 ; Gilleard et al , l984 ; Gilhooly , 1984 ; Zarit et al , l980 ) .
29 Other frequently reiterated problems with community service provision are the absence of effective collaboration between the different service agencies ( see Wright et al , 1988 ) , and the related fact that services tend to be delivered in a piecemeal and fragmented way without coordination at service delivery level ( see for example Challis and Davies , 1980 ) .
30 For some purposes the action project in operation can best be described directly by the development officers and their support workers ( see for example Murphy and Rapley , 1986 ) .
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