Example sentences of "he have a [adj] view [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It is impossible to watch the towplane and the ground ahead during the climb out so that in the event of a launch failure the glider pilot has to look for a field , whereas in the normal tow position he has a good view of the fields ahead all the time .
2 ‘ I do n't want to say he 's chauvinistic but he has a traditional view of women . ’
3 As somebody who helps build houses , he has a dim view of architects , which provokes a long and hugely enjoyable arguments with fellow Londoner Victor Saunders , himself an architect .
4 He had a close view of one of the pictures painted on the wall that he had not noticed before .
5 Through the heavy fretwork of its top windows he could see the towering minarets of the Bab es Zuweyla , and from the box window of the storey below , where he was standing when Sesostris approached , he had a good view along the street in both directions .
6 From the open door of the shed he had a good view of Firelight grazing and she got to know where he was and would come up to the hedge close by and wait for titbits .
7 Allen stole forward to a point where he had a good view of the Waste .
8 He had a good view of the long shadowy main corridor .
9 Doyle crouched behind a hedge , a hundred yards from the house , in a position where he had a good view of the road in both directions .
10 He had a good view of the main road and the side track that climbed to the row , and he could see a part of the buildings themselves , small and neat and quiet .
11 From this vantage point he had a panoramic view of the grounds within his field of vision .
12 From up here he had a panoramic view over a large part of the course and as he was in the last row could see behind as well as forward .
13 Although he had a magnificent view from the top of the Mount Lofty range of the Murray River , winding its course across the flats through a belt of dense dwarf eucalypti , there is no mention of his ever having reached its banks , let alone the remote western bend 100 miles away .
14 From the windows he had a clear view of the Brandenburg Gate .
15 And having found a vantage-point where he had a clear view of the meadows and was himself sheltered , he halted his pony and stood to watch , narrowing his eyes to single out coat-armour , and number the forces in the English party .
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