We have no meanings for "perceive many" in our records yet.
1 And I perceive many Londoners every day come.
2 Likewise, he is able to plainly perceive many fine vibrations of light which are invisible to the ordinary sight.
3 He perceived no reason for changing his convictions, but he did perceive many good and cogent reasons for not making them public.
4 A qualified wine taster may be able to accurately perceive many of the more objective physicochemical properties of a wine, such as acidity.
5 On my way through the book I perceived many new applications of my law of irony.
6 When you have perceived many objects, then you begin to reason in order to establish relations between them.
7 Above the cottage roofs she now perceived many masts of vessels clustered near the base of the tall chimney.
8 About an hour after the service was over, perceiving many people directing their steps toward it, I followed them.
9 Nevertheless, even at the court, the more thoughtful began to be anxious, and perceived many dark points on the horizon.
10 Having perceived many objects, we remember our perceptions, and this enables us to discern wherein things differ and wherein they agree.
11 Looking back, he perceived many things, and chiefly that he had taken a wrong line, and approached Mary's husband from a fatal angle.
12 I grew gradually to know these people, my new neighbours, largely through their children, and I perceived many things I had not dreamed of-beforethen.
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