Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] as a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Houses to accommodate them rose as a compact group south of the churchyard , and the church itself was soon ambitiously transformed to provide the setting for an elaborate cycle of daily worship .
2 One of the first books I read as a young adult was A G L Fisher 's History of Europe .
3 I qualified as an enrolled nurse in 1977 in Northern Ireland .
4 Feigning ignorance of PCs , I posed as a prospective customer running a part-time business from home .
5 We did n't think there was enough room for another member of the family , so I trained as a chartered accountant . ’
6 ’ Do I qualify as a nice man who lets you get on with your work in your own way and as far as possible on your own initiative ? ’
7 As Chairman of the National Curriculum English Working Group I was given the responsibility of deciding on programmes of study for all children from 5 to 16 , of putting right what I regarded as a major omission in the Kingman Report .
8 I therefore recommended to him what I regarded as a sensible viewpoint .
9 I was arrested for riding a bicycle without a rear light ; I woke as an enraged policeman took me by the throat .
10 I should make it clear at the outset that I act as a parliamentary consultant to the Professional Association of Teachers and that much of what I shall say tonight will be based on the practical experience of PAT members .
11 So much for the jerk-off theories put forward by the police , in which I figure as an adulterous version of George Joseph Smith — not the brides in the bath but the wittol in the water .
12 There 's nothing more soul- destroying ( and I speak as a seasoned dieter here ! ) than those inflexible diet regimes : no meals out , no dinner parties , no treats .
13 I speak as an hon. Member who has served time on four such Bills during the four years that I have been in the House — the City of London ( Various Powers ) Bill , the Tees and Hartlepool Port Authority Bill , and the London Underground Bills Nos. 1 and 2 .
14 It was in September 1953 that I arrived as a new boy at Woolverstone Hall School and it may be that Ray was also new to the school .
15 And their of first office as I recall as a little boy , was on the q quay as we used to say in Porthmadog .
16 ‘ I am a poorer man by some 200 £ than when I came to the Province ’ , he told Gould , apologising for his inability to pay his subscription to Birds of Australia , ‘ and my salary has been reduced to the lowest figure and is far below what I enjoyed as a private Gentleman . ’
17 I know as a public figure I am likely to be lampooned .
18 The outcome of this process , which I indicated as a possible development in the first edition of this book , is the pre-eminence in the present-day labour movement of social democratic parties ; that is to say , of parties which are themselves coalitions of diverse groups and intellectual tendencies , rather than centralized , monolithic organizations held together by strict discipline and an authoritatively interpreted ideology .
19 I remember as a young woman before I , even when I was courting , a young boys was there writing little notes behind the counter trying to make dates with me you know erm er it was , oh it was more than a shop .
20 I have always been very conscious of this because the last aircraft I flew as a regular airline pilot were the old Douglas DC-6 B and the Convair 340 .
21 While waiting for my O-level results I worked as a part-time crew member in a restaurant .
22 When I worked as a primary school teacher I sometimes retrieved that feeling with a particular clarity , walking between the tables on the hard floor , all the little looms working but needing my constant adjustment .
23 For two years I worked as a residential officer in old people 's homes in addition to my academic work .
24 The area I covered as a national organizer was from Berwick to Stirling and everything in between .
25 Sixty-nine-year-old Mr Marshall , who has lived in Merrybent for 23 years , said : ‘ I want people to know how I survived as an objective lesson to other people that they can get through it .
26 ‘ I want people to know how I survived as an objective lesson to other people that they can get through it .
27 I started as a junior receptionist and now I am a regional sales manager with a very attractive salary and benefits .
28 My periods , which had always been topsy-turvy and which I saw as a real indicator of health and wellbeing , settled into a reliable pattern .
29 I had been what I saw as a stop-gap anchor-man for Report , the teatime news programme , for less than eighteen months .
30 After supper the ladies sung Erse songs , to which I listened as an English audience to an Italian opera , delighted with the sound of words which I did not understand . ’
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