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

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1 Like Richter and Tatyana Nikolaieva , I seen him as the founding father of all true musical quality , a composer far removed from conventional notions of sobriety , academicism or dryness .
2 Leslie had an aunt in Durban , but by great misfortune disembarkation was on this occasion not allowed , and he did not meet the relative who had last seen him as a little boy in Scotland .
3 He could only assume that , being unaware of his true status as a DIA agent , the DEA and its oversight agency , the FBI , had seen him as a soft target , and framed the passport violation charge as a means of silencing an awkward witness without realizing who he was or the damage they were doing .
4 It was when I had n't seen him for a long time and I was all wound up .
5 His crooked smile was very much in evidence and Matey could have told her that since her arrival Dr Neil had been happier than she had seen him for a long time — there had been fewer backslidings towards the ‘ nasty whisky ’ since McAllister had appeared in his life to provide him with such rich amusement .
6 The big fella is more keyed up than I 've seen him for a long time and he is channelling all his energies into one final world cup fling .
7 He claimed he got started after being spotted in a bar by someone who mistakenly thought they had seen him in a male model magazine .
8 I 've seen him in a proper leather jacket .
9 She had seen him in the little town so immersed in looking up at the old buildings , that he ran into a lamppost .
10 Rory could see him through the open door as he crossed from the bungalow , through the yard of machinery and tractors , and into the business block .
11 I can see him through the open bar .
12 She was still searching for the right words to describe how she felt when he suddenly got up and went to meet more guests , and she did n't see him for a long time .
13 ‘ Or do you see him as an inconvenient remnant of outmoded superstition — a bit like a gallstone — of which we must all be purged before religion can take on its true form , that is , without him . ’
14 We did not see him as the spineless vicar that Fielding turned him into in Shamela .
15 I ca n't somehow see him in a red riding coat being winched aboard a dappled stallion .
16 I said I did n't go out with married men and did n't see him in a romantic way . ’
17 ‘ Why not go and see him in the proper way instead of lurking around by night ? ’
18 One ca n't see him in an ambassadorial role at all can one ?
19 The golf fan , if he notices the caddie at all , probably just sees him as the anonymous person who carries the superstar 's bag and is , incidentally , a walking billboard for the sponsor .
20 Since the war both groups have come to see him as an unnecessary evil .
21 When she had telephoned Robert about breakfast-time , asking to see him about an important matter , he had seemed so astonished that the only place he had been able to suggest was here .
22 During his time as Party chairman , many constituency officers had been to see him on a similar errand .
23 It suddenly crossed my mind that perhaps he thought I had come to see him on a professional level , that I was in need of spiritual help or whatever .
24 It was back in England for ( Sir ) Alexander Korda [ q.v. ] in 1933 that Laughton made his screen name in The Private Life of Henry VIII at the start of a sequence of major cinema biographies ( The Barretts of Wimpole Street ( 1934 ) , Mutiny on the Bounty ( 1935 ) , Rembrandt ( 1936 ) , and the unfinished I Claudius ( 1936 ) ) , which were to see him at the very peak of his reflective , anguished talent for larger-than-life monsters of reality .
25 He said he only needed to do two or three locums at these school clinics to see him round the other half of the world and he went off .
26 He had the faculty of meeting everyone on the level , and Father had a story of seeing him at a political meeting , which he was probably chairing , walking arm in arm with the Grand Old Man himself , both talking .
27 At the first performance Vivienne was terrified by Sweeney , seeing him as a homicidal madman .
28 To the distress of his family he rejected the Unitarian name in later life but not the ministerial title , though others , as he admits , ‘ only saw him as a Unitarian minister ’ .
29 ‘ I could n't believe he drugged me because I saw him as a caring person , he had got me into his confidence .
30 But Coleridge , who knew him well , saw him as a happy man , because he had one aim in life :
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