Example sentences of "see [Wh adv] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 From Britain and the northern United States , for instance , Ursa Major is circumpolar-that is to say it never sets , and can always be seen whenever the sky is sufficiently dark and clear ; from Hawaii it is not .
2 It remains to be seen how a rhino , which takes many years to evolve and which has evolved with a horn , will learn to survive without one .
3 We have seen how a couple of strands of consonant voices can be turned into mild or harsh dissonance , or vice versa — how dissonant voices can be turned towards consonance .
4 We have seen how a conversation between a sergeant and a private might proceed by reference to each of the felicity conditions for an order and a challenge to each of them in turn , before becoming more explicit with the use of a direct order and an outright refusal .
5 Thus it can be seen how a practice which has little educational validity can become a universal phenomenon .
6 It remains to be seen how the ITC will go about monitoring compliance with the statutory duties — it will certainly come under pressure to punish television stations which infringe the more detailed codes issued by the Broadcasting Standards Council and which suffer regular adverse adjudications from the Broadcasting Complaints Commission .
7 Its director , David Briar has seen how the farmers have made a new beginning .
8 We have seen how the redundancy payments scheme disadvantages women in comparison with men .
9 We have seen how the findings of Barry Hall and John Cairns have suggested that some genetic codes occur more often when they are useful than when they are not .
10 Have you seen how the king of the jungle behaves when the missus brings back a nice bit of venison ?
11 We have seen how the interaction of environment and genes has had a feedback effect , and how the fossils of primitive horses show they were little more than the size of large dogs .
12 It has been seen how the Thatcher Governments have been busy in turning the taxation of wealth into a voluntary tax .
13 We 've got there interest they come they 've seen they 've seen how the theatre works let them come to see the theatre working .
14 We have seen how the issue of race was first raised in the 1982 Metropolitan Police statistics which recorded the race of both victim and assailant in London .
15 We have already seen how the endogeneity of inflationary expectations played a central role in Friedman 's critique of the Phillips curve .
16 It was through the work of the library committees that the first of the project 's stated objectives was most clearly achieved , and we have seen how the proposal documents embodied clearly defined objectives which did relate the development of the library to the curriculum experience of the children .
17 It remains to be seen how the XM stacks up against traditional executive fare , but the chances are that it will be too exotic for the British palate .
18 We have already seen how the creators of wants , the psychology-manipulators in advertising , had set about trying to undermine it .
19 Pascoe had seen how the name filled her face with darkness .
20 We have already seen how the road-blocking and binding-over powers were employed against protesters at RAF Molesworth in 1985 .
21 We have seen how the impersonalism of public life and changes in the structure and functions of the family have led to an emphasis on self-fulfilment as something that belongs in the private sphere .
22 We have already seen how the courts still , on occasion , manipulate the notion of privilege ( in its new garb of legitimate expectation ) to deny or curtail procedural rights .
23 Having seen how the courts control discretion when it is found on the Y level , it is necessary also to examine the control methods when discretion appears within , or is , the jurisdictional fact .
24 We have already seen how the courts have used the Wednesbury sense of unreasonableness to invalidate exercises of discretionary power which could not realistically be regarded as absurd , or manifestly irrational .
25 We have already seen how the operations of multiplication and division introduce the use of double-length operands .
26 In particular , we have seen how the law can structure the decision-making process by insisting that decisions are made on the basis of a proper appreciation of the facts and by persons who are appropriately qualified .
27 We have seen how the phenomenon of interference depends on the collaborative reinforcement or cancellation of two trains of waves .
28 We have already seen how the study of sequences of tone-units in the speech of one speaker can reveal information carried by intonation which would not have been recognised if intonation was analysed only at the level of individual tone-units .
29 Computer instructions generally operate on individual scalar variables , although we have seen how the use of index registers allows us to interpret these scalars as elements of vectors or stacks .
30 We have seen how the symmetry of a molecule determines the number of bands expected in IR and Raman spectra , so that we can use the numbers of bands observed to decide on the actual symmetry of a molecule , such as PF 5 .
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