[ US /ˈsiɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /sˈiːɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. normal use of the faculty of vision
  2. perception by means of the eyes
ADJECTIVE
  1. having vision, not blind
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How To Use seeing In A Sentence

  • I looking forward to seeing Mark as we've been apart for a few days.
  • She would have taken a great deal of trouble that her daughters might not be a flounce behind the fashions, and was so far-seeing in her motherly anxieties, that she junketed herself and Major Buller to many an entertainment, where they were bored for their pains, that the extensive acquaintance might ensure to the girls partners, both for balls and for life when they came to require them. Six to Sixteen: A Story for Girls
  • That sense of aliveness isn't there when you read the text, and seeing the performance will be much more engaging.
  • The King looked at him and seeing him to be yet comelier than his daughter and goodlier than she in stature and proportion and brightness and perfection, said to him, The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • An established order of seeing, of understanding, of ruling, is simply exploded - the Modernist spirit asserts itself.
  • At parties, it is like being in a maze: one constantly has to jump in the air in the hope of seeing a way out. Times, Sunday Times
  • I look forward to seeing the place again, renewing old acquaintances. The Sun
  • Seeing her eyes unwavering, he was curious to know what had brought such a change in her attitude.
  • Visitors have reported seeing a dustbin lid moving by the pond because that's what he looks like. Times, Sunday Times
  • Instead of seeing dodgeball as a game where alpha males can relive their schoolyard dominance, they see it as a game for everyone.
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