Example sentences of "see [subord] having " in BNC.

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1 Sleep had always been regarded as being in some way analogous to death ; the hypnotic trance was seen as having aspects of both conditions .
2 It was seen as having both healing and destructive power .
3 The celibate woman was seen as having been freed from the ‘ curse of Eve ’ , to bear children in sorrow and to be under the domination of the male .
4 What we as farmers say to the contrary is often ignored because we are seen as having an interest to represent .
5 Indeed , the Stewart monarchy can be seen as having an unusually easy time , in comparison with the difficulties faced by others in imposing royal rule elsewhere in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries .
6 If employed , they can be seen as having obsolete skills in which it is not worth investing .
7 Yet systematic exclusion of women from higher education can only be seen as having forced the great majority of capable women out of the intellectual mainstream .
8 The contacts between the Lemass and O'Neill governments were seen as having been brought about by pressure from Britain , and as a result ‘ O'Neill has got his orders to play down discrimination ’ .
9 Adultery therefore should be seen as having a symbolic quality , amounting to sexual conduct outrageous to the other .
10 The judges were certainly aware that with such an arrangement , they could be seen as having ignored the merits of the designs and the practicalities of execution , and attempted to explain their position in their report to Hall .
11 He also could be seen as having secured the continuation of his private office at No. 4 Parliament Street , when the block of buildings between King Street and Parliament Street was omitted from the Act .
12 Given this situation , the particular configuration of state , ideology , custom , kinship etc. , can be seen as having a significance previously underrated in determining the precise nature of a mode of production .
13 The AEF 's concept is being taken forward by representatives of two groups which might be seen as having totally opposing interests : the IATA-sponsored Air Transport Action Group and the AEF — a co-operative effort which is in itself an encouraging indication of what can be achieved .
14 In fact , the message is seen as having little news value and is confined to wishes of a happier 1993 .
15 This means that potentially mature human relationships with objects in the environment , such as people seen as having authority , are distorted by immature reactions from the inner world of psychic compulsions .
16 These conceptions in the mind define how individual managers relate themselves to those seen as having authority and those who are subordinate .
17 Although this culture can be seen as having profound political significance there is , according to Willis , no wish for a corporate voice on the part of the working class .
18 A member of the Finance Houses Association put it to us that the development of consumer credit might be seen as having three phases : first , loans granted to buy tangible assets ; secondly , loans for intangibles such as holidays ; and finally , loans simply as loans .
19 If we had proposed a separate profile component for knowledge about language , it might have been seen as having a weight ( in terms of content , teaching time and assessment ) which was disproportionate in relation to the English curriculum as a whole .
20 This will not , however , be achieved as long as IT is regarded as the province of mathematics , science and technology in the curriculum , and English — or other language — teachers are seen as having little part to play .
21 After analysis , these strategies will be seen as having their own associated difficulties .
22 Children with low comprehension scores but high expressive scores are seen as having possible emotional problems , or as suffering from echolalia .
23 In both cases the success of the university sub-disciplinary segments can be seen as having partly resulted from their having found allies outside of their own organizations .
24 Recruitment is based on personality or physical attributes which are seen as having nothing to do with education ;
25 Women were already an issue in industrial sociology ; for example , married women with home responsibilities were seen as ‘ problems ’ for employers ( Brown et al , 1964 ) and women were seen as having difficulties accommodating their ‘ two roles ’ ( Myrdal and Klein , 1956 ; Klein , 1965 ; Komarovsky , 1962 ) .
26 Two objects may reflect the same wavelengths into our eyes yet be seen as having different colours .
27 The same object may reflect different wavelengths at different times yet be seen as having the same colour .
28 Those perceived to be ‘ university material ’ were directed to high status choices , academic subjects , and those not seen as having the potential for higher education , despite having the same raw marks , were encouraged to opt for a more ‘ realistic ’ course .
29 However , there is a danger that parents who can not raise their children appropriately , or find a job , or provide sufficient income to support their family , or whose children engage in delinquent activities , are seen as having some form of personal failing or character weakness .
30 For some , this depth is seen as having imposed an institutional bias and rigidity on the economy from as long ago as the late nineteenth century .
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