Verb
(transitive, formal) To accompany a guest to the door when he or she leaves (also used figuratively).
Please see our guest out.
I saw that boy into the world and I will see him out.
(transitive) To continue something until completion; to watch an activity develop to a conclusion.
I'll never give up. I'm going to see this thing out.
(Can we verify this sense?) (transitive) To outlive.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgBirth order effects are like those things that you think you see out of the corner of your eye but that disappear when you look at them closely. They do keep turning up but only because people keep looking for them and keep analyzing and reanalyzing their data until they find them. Judith Rich Harris
Friends are like windows through which you see out into the world and back into yourself. If you don't have friends you see much less than you otherwise might. Merle Shain
It is a secret but I have pulled the chain out of the wall. I can see out the little window all I like. Richard Matheson
Nice, the club where I started my career in 1983, want me to see out my playing days there. David Ginola
If we limit our vision to the real world, we will forever be fighting on the minus side of things, working only too make our photographs equal to what we see out there, but no better. Galen Rowell
I had a tumor in my left eye which killed the optic nerve, but it's my real eye. I just cannot see out of it. Sandy Duncan