How To Use See the light In A Sentence

  • But music proved good therapy too, and she and Cafiso started looking around for simpatico band members in the hope that their album might eventually see the light of day.
  • But we saw pictures earlier today through that glass window of the officials there holding up the cards one-by-one, trying to look through the perforations to see if they could see the light.
  • This selection of peep-toe boots, high-heeled Oxfords and studded short boots (I'm sorry, Gucci, but eww) should not see the light of day.
  • From her vantage upon the cliff, she could see the lights of the town where she had once lived.
  • The tragedy is that, like many of Egypt's undiscovered secrets, some of these items will never see the light of day.
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  • They could travel from one end of the city to the other and never see the light of day.
  • “I can see the lighthouse on the island,” she said at the top with one long leg hooked over the crosspiece which supported a lantern. THE FORBIDDEN GAME
  • We finally made him see the light.
  • We see the lights of the houses that surround the garden.
  • They were Indians, though I could see the light from the few lanterns gleaming off their white chests.
  • Newspaper stories see the light of day for all sorts of strange and inscrutable reasons.
  • The implication must be that a lot of bids are being planned but never see the light of day.
  • Both midwives eventually see the light and accept Christ as the Savior.
  • The catch is that the new arrangement could take years of fraught negotiation and new treaties to see the light of day. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's been a hard few months, but we're finally beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel.
  • We finally made him see the light.
  • Cage is in quirky mode, full of tics and phobias (see the lighthearted trailer here), but manages to be fairly grounded emotionally. Top 10 Ridley Scott Films » Scene-Stealers
  • Australians have created over 700 original musicals, though few of them see the light of day, let alone the footlights of Her Majesty's.
  • The electronics retailer thinks it can do something special with the music service though and now those plans will see the light of day.
  • I could see the lights from the town twinkling in the distance.
  • Let all keep it up and hope that the carpers and whingers will see the light and come on board.
  • Practically, this means that most items will never see the light of archivists' flashbulbs.
  • And like Mr Sherry, Mr Hillier has laboured for many years and has likewise produced three heavy volumes, the last of which is about to see the light of day in the bookshops.
  • One of the outfits means I will be baring bits of skin that don't usually see the light of day.
  • Some of these documents will probably never see the light of day.
  • Whether the more pressing imperative is to have an impact on tilting various domestic tweedledum - tweedledee battles back towards the more liberal side of things or to provide a platform for narrative counters to be heard by generating and featuring unheard stories, untold history, under-represented perspectives and ideas that never see the light of day because they represent the kind of systemic change that isn't on the velvet chamber agenda. Tracy Rosenberg: Towards A Just Communications System: Pacifica Radio and the Never-Ending Battle
  • He said "Shalit will not see the light of day" until Israel releases hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.
  • It was chance, acting through the impulses of the War Office, which caused little Laurence to see the light on Irish soil; but though he was born in the melodiously named Valley of Honey, there was little of honeyed sweetness, and much bitterness as of gall and coloquintida, in his early boyhood. A History of the Four Georges, Volume II (of 4)
  • I see the lights of a town ahead
  • They're jockeying for position the moment they see the light at the end of the tunnel.
  • Conner could see the lights that danced in the feral's eyes as he licked his flews.
  • Ahead, I could see the lights of a fair-sized town or city.
  • You may observe the glow or loom of the lighthouse before you see the light of the lighthouse's lantern.
  • Now, I have a bit of a problem though - one of the outfits means I will be baring bits of skin that don't usually see the light of day.
  • The electronics retailer thinks it can do something special with the music service though and now those plans will see the light of day.
  • I see the light-bodied Creole, in "cottonade" jacket and trousers of bright blue, mounted upon his small Spanish horse, and galloping along the Levee road. The Quadroon Adventures in the Far West
  • This decision will ensure that the Pentagon Papers never see the light of day.
  • I hear a swoosh of water and see the light reflecting off the surface.
  • I mean, Harry has been hell-bent on killing Peter for quite a while now, but a brief 30 second conversation with the butler is enough to make him see the light and change his mind? EXTRALIFE – By Scott Johnson - Attn: Nerdtacular Attendees!
  • He still has a Quaker-like faith that if only people could hear the truth, untainted by spin, untrivialised by the media, they would begin to see the light.
  • Johnny can see the light at the end of the tunnel, as he dances around the fire and refuses any tribal talk about why it is turbulently raging.
  • There must be literally thousands, perhaps millions, of such crimes that are never recorded, that will never see the light of day.
  • ‘Say that again and you'll never see the light of day again, buster,’ I said in mock threat.
  • It gave her a warm feeling to come home at night and see the light, like a beacon, burning brightly, beckoning her to the warmth of family.
  • This is cinema not for the faint-hearted, where you have to go into the dark places first before you can see the light.
  • Visitors flock there to see the lights gently altering on the facades of the 500-year-old buildings.
  • So why not take the opportunity of hiring a minibus or coach and take the group to see the lights? Working with Teenagers
  • With all the new regs in place - Gramm-Leach-Bliley, Sarbanes-Oxley and the like - boards are going to see the light; they'll start to understand how important infosecurity is.
  • He left the country'with the hope it would someday see the light of day '. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was one faint hope that they would see the light. Times, Sunday Times
  • When Paulo is in the bathroom hiding the diamonds, you see the lights turn on, and hear Ben ask “who left the door open”? The Tail Section » Lost 3.15 Left Behind Promo In Divx
  • My own private story likewise, my love adventures, my rambles; the frowns and smiles of fortune on my bardship my poems and fragments, that must never see the light, shall be occasionally inserted. Robert Burns
  • Earth Day coincides with spring time and even here in Manhattan, many of us are thrilled to see the light green aura of life remerge as trees bud and flowers bloom. Earth Day 2009
  • Let your servant see the light of your face; in your mercy be my saviour.
  • There was one faint hope that they would see the light. Times, Sunday Times
  • I see the lights of the Navy in darkness - the masthead lights, and red and green sidelights and stern lights.
  • Opening his eyes to slits, he brought his wrist in front of his face to see the light flashing on his wristband .
  • Far below the plane we could see the lights of London.
  • There was one faint hope that they would see the light. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nine years on, that fledgling script is about to see the light of day.
  • For the moment, though, those of us who travel daily by bus in and out of Edinburgh would be happy to see the lights change to green slightly more frequently.
  • The project has been going on for months but at last we can see the light at the end of the tunnel.
  • We could see the lights of the coast directly off the nose of the aircraft.
  • There was one faint hope that they would see the light. Times, Sunday Times
  • He could see the light shimmer of unshed tears in her eyes and he hated himself for doing this but yet he couldn't stop.
  • He left the country'with the hope it would someday see the light of day '. Times, Sunday Times
  • The allegro begins in a beautiful apartment in south-east Paris, from which you can see the lights of the Eiffel Tower scanning the sky.
  • We could see the lights on the distant boats twinkling.
  • Both midwives eventually see the light and accept Christ as the Savior.
  • For many years he had little expectation that his writings would see the light of day but the daring One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich caused a sensation.
  • Because the fertilizer doesn't see the light of day from the time it is unloaded until it is loaded onto spreaders or tenders, both dust and spillage are virtually eliminated.
  • I know I'm going to college and that I have a bright future ahead of me - I can already see the light.
  • Motorists whose vehicles have tinted windscreens are being given three weeks to see the light - or face prosecution.
  • Living proof that RNC prominence is fading and the ovine followers are dwindling in number since savvy people are beginning to see the light instead of being allowed to be smitten by blind fanaticism. Poll: New Jersey gubernatorial race tightens up
  • Let all keep it up and hope that the carpers and whingers will see the light and come on board.
  • She could see the light from the station up ahead and feel the subway car slowing to greet it.
  • There was one faint hope that they would see the light. Times, Sunday Times

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