Seeing clearly: Frame Semantic, Psycholinguistic, and Cross ...
Seeing clearly: Frame Semantic, Psycholinguistic, and Cross ...
Seeing clearly: Frame Semantic, Psycholinguistic, and Cross ...
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APPENDIX C. EXPERIMENT 1 260<br />
There was a tap at the door <strong>and</strong> Oliver entered with the word that Heiser wished<br />
to SEE the Captain.<br />
Lying awake atnight, he could SEE them, laid out on the oor of his mind.<br />
Apparently he was not a participant in the college or university theatricals,<br />
which he once attacked as utterly unworthy performances [SEE Apology, 3:300];<br />
but even in that famous passage, Milton was aiming not at the theatricals as<br />
such but at their performance by `persons either enter'd, or presently to enter<br />
into the ministry'.<br />
In contrast to the nuclear changes described above, another change in muscle<br />
nuclei was SEEN, usually occurring in bers that were somewhat smaller than<br />
normal but that showed distinct cross-striations <strong>and</strong> myo brillae.<br />
He lived in the dawn; he could only SEE the light coming over the horizon.<br />
At rst I did not know what she meant; I thought she must be SEEING me as<br />
some one who had just come from SEEING her gr<strong>and</strong>mother, in their distant<br />
home-city.<br />
Ch<strong>and</strong>ler, looking to right <strong>and</strong> left to SEE how his men were faring, suddenly<br />
SAW another gure bounding up the hill, hurling grenades <strong>and</strong> hollering the<br />
battle cry as he ran.<br />
But in order to keep Letch in the public eye <strong>and</strong> out of trouble, I wrote in a<br />
part especially for him|that of a dashing ru an who \SEES the light" <strong>and</strong> is<br />
saved by the inspiring example of Mother Cabrini.<br />
I didn't SEE her till several days later at the wedding, <strong>and</strong> her face looked like<br />
it had never had a blemish on it.<br />
Not until the words had been spoken did Abel suddenly SEE the old house <strong>and</strong><br />
the insistent sea, <strong>and</strong> feel his contrition blotted out in one shameful moment of<br />
covetousness.<br />
ISAW holes in planes at the airport <strong>and</strong> in cars in the streets.<br />
The manager sat behind the group so he could SEE <strong>and</strong> count the h<strong>and</strong>s that<br />
went up, <strong>and</strong> the director wrote the numbers on the blackboard.<br />
I never SAW him.<br />
Somehow our contemporary Moloch must be induced to SEE reason.<br />
He could not SEE objects as uni ed, self-contained, <strong>and</strong> organized gures, as a<br />
person does with normal vision.<br />
Havana was lled with an excitement which you could SEE in the brightness of<br />
men's eyes <strong>and</strong> hear in the pitch of their voices.<br />
He provoked outraged editorials when, after a post-Inaugural inspection of the<br />
White House with Mrs. Kennedy, heremarked to reporters, \We just cased the<br />
joint to SEE what was there".<br />
\Well"|I didn't|I didn't ever want to SEE that woman again.<br />
The ledger was full of most precise information: date of laying, length of incubation<br />
period, numberofchick reaching the rst week, second week, fth week,<br />
weight of hen, size of rooster's wattles <strong>and</strong> so on, all scrawled out in a h<strong>and</strong><br />
that looked more Chinese than English, the most jagged <strong>and</strong> sprawling Alex<br />
had ever SEEN.