Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] the naked eye " in BNC.
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1 | This may sound complicated , but once Sigma has been identified it is easy to find again with binoculars , though much less so with the naked eye . |
2 | It is maddening , since so often you can see traces of underdrawing on the painting 's surface just with the naked eye ! ’ |
3 | The sand and silt particles , which are roughly spherical in shape range from 2,000 microns ( ″ ) to 50 microns in diameter ( sands ) and from 50 to 2 microns ( silts ) ; the finer silt particles being indistinguishable individually to the naked eye . |
4 | I look her straight in the naked eye . |
5 | A lot of the operations now I do I think I can do better that I 'm now seeing detail that I never saw before with the naked eye . |
6 | Of course the fluctuations of Epsilon Aurigæ are noticeable with binoculars , or even with the naked eye , at the time of eclipse ; Eta makes a suitable comparison star . |
7 | It is a fine sight in binoculars , and the orange colour is noticeable even with the naked eye . |
8 | Look in particular for the complicated Tarantula Nebula ( 30 Doradûs ) , which is the most brilliant part of the whole Cloud and can be identified even with the naked eye : it is the largest known diffuse nebula , and if it were as close to us as M42 in Orion it would cast strong shadows . |
9 | The video-tape being produced was obviously defective , even to the naked eye . |
10 | With the morning light slanting in here , and showing up every mote of dust and grain of wood-powder , the individual nodules of that fingertip showed even to the naked eye . |
11 | This last category is the thing that started , at least to the naked eye , in Berkeley , California about 1964 , and swept around the world reaching its zenith about 1969–70 — just five years flat . |
12 | But the vast expanse of the oceans seems devoid of plants — at least to the naked eye ; and if weed grows conspicuously on coral reefs , then that is a often a sign that all is not well . |
13 | The spectral type is F. In general F-stars are said to be yellowish , but I have never seen any colour in Canopus , either with the naked eye or with optical aid ; to me it looks pure white . |
14 | It is said to be slightly yellowish , though I have never seen any colour in it either with the naked eye or with binoculars . |