Example sentences of "[noun] see it [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It may take several releases and many months before the company starts to see a return on its investments , so it is essential for an indie to have a relatively solid financial base to see it through the difficult early stages and to sustain the levels of promotion until an act on the label breaks .
2 Virgin Atlantic , as the new airline was to be called , would need to become airborne within the next three to four months , to take advantage of the summer traffic and generate the necessary cash reserves to see it through the fallow winter months .
3 Donna saw it in the rear-view mirror , convinced and elated that she 'd done it crippling damage .
4 HW = Husband sees it as the wife 's decision HJ = Husband sees it as a joint decision HH = Husband sees it as the husband 's decision WW = Wife sees it as the wife 's decision WJ = Wife sees it as a joint decision WH = Wife sees it as the husband 's decision .
5 Er and of course if you 're in one group , you might think that something 's trivial and you might denigrate another a group for talking about those things , when in fact that group sees it as an important talk about it might see the thing that the other group hold dear to talk about as something trivial , and to denigrate .
6 Charles and Louis saw it as a divine Judgement , confirming their claims to a share in the Frankish heartlands .
7 HW = Husband sees it as the wife 's decision HJ = Husband sees it as a joint decision HH = Husband sees it as the husband 's decision WW = Wife sees it as the wife 's decision WJ = Wife sees it as a joint decision WH = Wife sees it as the husband 's decision .
8 Some nationalists saw it as a cosmetic measure , to end the talks on a high note for Unionists .
9 It does not take too much distortion to see it as an anti-abortion tract .
10 But now the firm which employs 150 people in Belle Vale Road , Gateacre , wants people to see it as a classy and versatile product .
11 The community interpretation of the private language argument sees it as a direct consequence of Wittgenstein 's thoughts about rules , rule-following and objectivity .
12 Although O'Neill tried to present the case as one of the law simply taking its natural course to deal with illegal disorder , the Free Presbyterians saw it as a deliberate attempt to use the apparatus of the state to suppress true Bible Protestantism .
13 Some or the political personalities saw it as a new political pressure point on the Westminster government .
14 Far from regarding a tight budget as a restriction on their decorating , Tim and Patsy see it as a positive advantage .
15 Critics of the report saw it as an old-style socialist attempt to plan the future of an industry , without due regard to market forces .
16 His defenders saw it as efficiency , his detractors saw it as the uncaring side of Graeme Souness .
17 Marxists argue that it derives from the needs of the capitalist mode of production , while elite theorists see it as an institutional-bureaucratic coincidence of interest .
18 It was like a fog to see it from the main road .
19 While O'Neill and his supporters represented that visit as the Republic s de facto recognition that the North did exist as a separate entity and that doing necessary economic business with the North meant the Republic attenuating its claims to the territory of Ulster , the conservative Protestants saw it as an horrendous betrayal of the history and sacrifice of Ulster Protestants .
20 Whatever it was , the Regent saw it as an unlooked-for opportunity .
21 Whilst some welcome the opportunity of early retirement , others see it as an unwanted imposition on their lives .
22 Many consumers are against it : about three out of ten say it 's never a good thing , and most others see it as an occasional necessity rather than as having positive advantages ( see Appendix I , Main survey ) .
23 The verdict on whether Mr Lamont will remain as Chancellor remained open last night , with many Tories seeing it as an electoral mistake to raise fuel bills in the run up the next election , while others praised him for tackling the public deficit .
24 Even the exacting Mary Crawford sees it as a desirable prize , ‘ a park , a real park five miles round , a spacious modern-built house , so well placed and well screened as to deserve to be in any collection of engravings of gentlemen 's seats in the kingdom ’ ; the absence of family portraits does not deter her .
25 When Mitchell nabs a Mafia gangster and cop killer the district attorney 's office sees it as a perfect opportunity to exercise the death penalty .
26 The Tories saw it as a constitutional disaster without parallel , the Whigs as a famous and hard-won victory for a bold and far-reaching measure against the reactionary defence of an out-dated and corrupt constitution .
27 Four months later the Tories see it as an unqualified success , propelling the man who presided over it , Mr Michael Howard , into the political big league .
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