Example sentences of "[adv] see [prep] [be] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | After St George 's , almost all Unionist candidates ran without making promises to support the coalition ; this did not mean that all of them joined the diehard group when elected , but it showed that coalition was no longer seen to be a winning ticket . |
2 | Example In an essay on an eighteenth-century play , which has argued that the women in the play are generally seen to be a source of disruption or confusion , you could conclude by asking whether women are general sources of disruption , broadly understood , in eighteenth-century drama . |
3 | The exaltation of pure science is thus seen to be a defence against the invasion of norms which limit directions of potential advance and threaten the stability and continuance of scientific research as a valued activity . |
4 | This is thus seen to be a continuous monitoring activity as changes late in the development programme , within say the concepts stage , could severely affect the confidence in all downstream activities including the actual articles being produced . |
5 | This instrument is thus seen to be a splendid complement to the other members of the woodwind fraternity . |
6 | Under the Net and Lord of the Flies are too philosophical to be called angry , Golding ( in any case ) was always seen to be a spirit apart , and a few of these authors were strikingly young at their moment of first success . |
7 | So we would examine socially determined personality differences between the sexes , why it is that men are always seen to be the intellectuals , things like that , They were important discussions as women often feel that community action is a mystery to them and that the only thing they can really understand is looking after the kids , I think the courses were a success because many campesina women became important leaders afterwards . |
8 | Sexual discrimination is also seen to be an important factor in turning female graduates away from engineering . |
9 | Sexual discrimination is also seen to be an important factor in turning female graduates away from engineering . |
10 | Here there is talk of cooperation on foreign policy and of furthering ‘ the European idea ’ ; there is also seen to be the need to ‘ protect ’ Europe 's ‘ common interests ’ and to invest ‘ this union with the necessary means of action ’ . |
11 | Cobham , however , smacked too much of the schoolroom , having already achieved distinction as a writer about confession : learning , especially when tainted by theological or pastoral concern , was by now seen to be a dangerous thing in an archbishop . |
12 | The triangular plan of the market place , which determined the shape of the town here , is now seen to be a perfectly rational shape for its purpose . |
13 | Proportional representation in Parliament might translate into disproportionate power in government in a way that would make the established first-past-the-post inequalities look rather more fair than is often seen to be the case . |
14 | I felt what I can now see to be an unreasonable surge of panic . |
15 | She wondered who had been reading so recently on the carefully made bed , or if this fat book , which she now saw to be a collection of Sherlock Holmes stories , were a relic of the past summer , and the maid , or whoever cleared the house , was devotedly keeping her employer 's place . |
16 | That may not be as difficult as S&N or anyone else fears given that women 's more consensus-based approach to management is increasingly seen to be an appropriate style of management . |
17 | Space-time as a whole is then seen to be a patchwork of such freely falling frames . |
18 | In the electromagnetic case the difficulty is resolved by using Maxwell 's equations , which are consistent with SR ; Coulomb 's law is then seen to be the limiting form of one of these equations when the charges are slowly moving ( quasi-static limit ) . |
19 | There was undoubtedly seen to be a growing problem regarding adolescent girls because they were maturing a little earlier and marrying later , around 25 , and it was in this context that such horrors as clitoridectomies could be developed . |
20 | From its early days , broadcasting was therefore seen to be a legitimate field of public policy and its development was shaped by periodic government inquiries . |