Example sentences of "which can be seen " in BNC.
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1 | The Hortons added on to the mill house , and during Elizabeth 's reign they made extensive gabled additions which can be seen best on the east façade . |
2 | Polished metal looks as smooth and featureless as glass to the naked eye but , unlike glass , it is a crystalline material ; it solidifies as a network of tiny grains which can be seen if the metal is etched with a dilute acid and examined under a microscope ( fig. 5.11a ) . |
3 | Both these methods leave very characteristic helical seams which can be seen on examples of wires made by the two methods in Figure 8.6a and b , taken from genuine antiquities . |
4 | In addition coins have provided decisive evidence for the position in the structure of carved column drums , one of which can be seen today in the British Museum . |
5 | In particular , it was known that each cell contains a nucleus which can be seen to contain a number of threads , the chromosomes . |
6 | The bronze statue of Boadicea , in her chariot , which can be seen on the Thames Embankment at Westminster Bridge , is the work of Hamo Thornycroft , R.A. , who had a studio in Holland Park , but it proved too small , so he removed it to the ‘ tin tabernacle ’ which Sir John Isaac Thornycroft , F.R.S. , had built as a workshop in the gardens of Walpole House on Chiswick Mall , during the last decade of the nineteenth century . |
7 | Herons , flamingos , spoonbills and cranes are examples , some of which can be seen elsewhere in the park . |
8 | Examples of odd-toes and even-toed ungulates which can be seen in the park . |
9 | This critique underlies much of the ‘ Great Debate ’ which has been in progress since the Ruskin speech of 1976 and which can be seen to have result ed in the 1986 and 1988 Education Acts . |
10 | Beside it is a small round table on which can be seen a photograph of my wife and me with our three elder children ; then there is an armchair also with a long seat and a dark-blue dog bed for our two spaniels beside another table with books and magazines . |
11 | Any study of postmodernism in Britain must first of all establish that there really is something to study ; that a literature does exist in Britain which can be seen , in Brian McHale 's terms , as the ‘ logical and historical ’ consequence of the earlier initiatives of modernism . |
12 | Like Sukenick and Pynchon , Wurlitzer has acknowledged an influence from Kerouac which can be seen in the open structure of his first novel The Octopus ( 1969 : published in America under the title Nog ) . |
13 | The latter , named Pooldhooie , is the only one of the buildings which can be seen today as the Bispham Conservative Club , the others have been demolished in 1983 for a Sainsbury 's store . |
14 | The Kennet and Avon Canal Trust preserves the engines , which can be seen on Sundays and are occasionally in steam . |
15 | From its entrance off Bridge Street , watched over by St. Clement 's church , the tower of which can be seen in our illustration , this traffic-free lane progresses in two distinct parts . |
16 | The submembrane region contains a regular system of filamentous elements ( White , 1969 ) , which can be seen lateral to the circumferential band of microtubules in discoid platelets ( Zucker-Franklin , 1970 ) . |
17 | The secret of success here will be the basis of consultation and cooperation which can be seen as beneficial to both sides . |
18 | A private garden for the use of hotel patrons runs down the water 's edge and there is a wonderful view of the Sea of Moyle stretching beyond to the shores of Scotland and the Western Isles which can be seen on clear days . |
19 | To be precise , in the original class of solutions given by Yurtsever ( 1988 a ) , V is taken in the form ( 10.77 ) which can be seen to be generalizations of the degenerate Ferrari-Ibañez solution described in Section 10.5 . |
20 | Dr. Clarke had himself been a surveyor in the town in 1765 : he also cultivated the art of perspective drawing , examples of which can be seen in the plans he drew for Whitaker 's History of Manchester of 1765 and 1771 . |
21 | There seems to be an energy spirit in each tree and each species which can be seen by sensitives . |
22 | The most common organic manure these days is the spent marc , the residue of skins , pips and stalks amassed after the pressing process , which can be seen in purple-black piles by the roadside from November onwards . |
23 | On the front , you have a picture with a jigsaw-shaped piece missing which you have cut out and either put it on their back or hidden in a little flap on the costume , which can be seen if people lift the flap up . |
24 | The emotional , mental and spiritual levels form an energy field around the body known as the aura , aspects of which can be seen by some people and which have recently been partially demonstrated by modern technology . |
25 | The only details which can be seen in these blustery conditions are the two figures battling against the elements . |
26 | On the other hand the Kingdom might appear like a blaze of lights from a city located on high ground which can be seen from miles around ( Matt. |
27 | ‘ publicly expose ’ Publicly means an exposure which can be seen by more than one person . |
28 | As such it is neater than the confusion presented by a reality which can be seen as not belonging to the self ; or as perhaps belonging to the self ; or as , if belonging to the self , equally incapable of assimilation by it or separation from it . |
29 | An important assessment of the state of the subject is provided by the Leeds Festschrift ( Harden 1956a ) which can be seen to develop many of the traditional themes ; the study of the Jutes of Kent , by C.F.C. Hawkes , stimulated by the latest typologies and chronologies of grave-goods on the Continent ( Werner 1935 ; Kuhn 1940 ) was one of the last studies employing the traditional methodology , although its influence can still be found in more recent work ( Hawkes and Pollard 1981 ) . |
30 | A number of student ‘ tides ’ were underway which can be seen as forms of adaptive behaviour or strategies for improving their social position , either temporarily or on a more permanent basis . |