Example sentences of "[pron] [vb base] [pron] as the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I do n't know if I 'm unique , I suspect I 'm not but I go to my two design people and I say right blah blah blah this is what we want to do but you organise the printer I want you as the designer to find a printer that you can work with but here 's my timescale and it 's up to them
2 ‘ Pity , Jane , is an insult from some people , but from you I accept it as the mother of love .
3 As when you act for a seller or mortgagor , add any other documents which suggest themselves as the matter proceeds .
4 An obvious objection is that the attitude of respect is not regarded by those who display it as the source of their obligation .
5 You strike me as the kind of fierce little feminist who thinks men are beneath her contempt , rapists one and all . ’
6 ‘ In fact you strike me as the sort of poisonous little pockmark that will always be wrong !
7 In crude terms the debate divides between those who see the Green Belt as an essential bastion against untrammelled growth in areas of development pressure , and those who see it as the source of many of the problems facing such areas .
8 But ‘ Miserere nostri ’ is medieval in technique as the lovely ‘ Ave rosa sine spinis ’ is in feeling , and at his finest — as in the glorious antiphon ‘ Gaude gloriosa Dei mater ’ — we hear him as the heir of the Eton composers , not of Josquin .
9 And they class it as the south .
10 Under the general safety requirement , retailers are criminally liable if they knowingly expose an unsafe product for sale , whereas in civil law , under the product liability regime , retailers are liable to third party victims only if they present themselves as the producer or can not identify the person who supplied them with the product .
11 They adore her as the queen of their traditional music , and then revile her , with equal enthusiasm , as a moral obscenity .
12 They adore her as the queen of their traditional music , and then revile her , with equal enthusiasm , as a moral obscenity .
13 It was said in Scorer v Seymour-Johns [ 1966 ] 3 All ER 347 per Salmon LJ that the special element can be characterised as the connection relying on the employee to the extent that they regard him as the business rather than his employer : in that case the employer 's business had many recurring customers ( cf Fellowes & Son v Fisher [ 1975 ] 2 All ER 829 ) .
14 They treat you as the expert , ’ said one experienced man .
15 As infants slowly become aware of the mother as a separate person , they see her as the owner of a much needed resource .
16 And rather than viewing the party 's triumph in October as an expression of the will of the Russian masses , they see it as the product of manipulation of an unstable situation by an élite group of fanatical revolutionaries .
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