Example sentences of "[pron] [pers pn] [adv] consider " in BNC.

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1 However , in the passage in which he specifically considers whether a woman can be ordained , his answering in the negative , it must be pointed out , is dependent on biological presuppositions which we now know to be false .
2 He was justifiably proud of this splendid work which he rightly considered to be his main literary achievement .
3 The exchange may on occasion wish to maintain that it was not previously aware of a specific floor practice which it now considers undesirable .
4 It is deeply critical in particular of the exploitation of the earth which it often considers the three semitic religions are guilty of pursuing — Judaism , Christianity and Islam .
5 An old woman made older by the suicide of one whom she still considered a girl .
6 Von Sophias Jonnifer , who I personally consider to be capable of winning anywhere in the world .
7 They are people whom we rarely consider in this House , but when there is a suicide or accident on the railway , the driver , and his mate if appropriate , may be mentally scarred for life by the experience .
8 One of a horse 's most important forms of communication is one we rarely consider .
9 Dr Alexandre was a privileged witness to what we now consider to have been the most important period in Modigliani 's life , from 1907 to 1914 ; that is , from his arrival in Paris .
10 What we never consider is whether women really want men to change or whether we take an active role — both as lovers and mothers — in keeping traditional expectations of men alive .
11 As the couple turned away , the wife was grumbling that her husband had missed the chance of what they now considered to be the best prospect .
12 During the discussion , one of the French counsellors proposed that Edward was bound to swear fealty , as well as homage to Philip V. Edward 's own words in reply to what he clearly considered an outrageous suggestion survive : they were spoken without the advice of his council , apparently because they had difficulty in hearing the king 's whispered words and he lost patience .
13 The Frenchman sat next to her , assiduous in his attentions to her needs , enquiring whether she would like more of this or that , whilst periodically paying her what he evidently considered rather dashing compliments .
14 A marked increase in their power would challenge what he surely considered his rightful position within the Yorkist polity .
15 A marked increase in their power would challenge what he surely considered his rightful position within the Yorkist polity .
16 His lecture took as its starting point the distinction drawn by the Wolfenden Committee between public and private behaviour , and what it thus considered to be the proper role of the criminal law in these areas .
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