Example sentences of "is [verb] as [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The allowance can not normally be paid for the first time after pension age because it is regarded as overlapping with the retirement pension .
2 This well stirred is then taken all as one dose or only half is taken if ‘ special care is necessary ’ The stock bottle is shaken as suggested in the method above .
3 For corporation tax purposes , a dividend is treated as paid on the date when it becomes due and payable ( s 834(1) , Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 ) .
4 The amount of the pension is not related actuarial to the sums which each recipient has actually paid in contribution ; but the right to receive it is treated as flowing from the possession of a contribution record , and indeed the pension rates are represented as related to the contribution rates , assuming contribution over a full working life .
5 Hence the section 186 applies so long as the certificate is authenticated as executed by the company by the use of the common seal , the official seal or signatures of two directors or one director and the secretary ( or , in the case of Scottish companies , under the still wider provisions of section 36B ) .
6 A teacher is reported as speaking in the following way : ‘ Two huge girls were fighting .
7 IMI is depicted as lying below the efficient frontier EMF as the investor is engaged in the construction of a series of sub-optimal portfolios by the definition of the efficient frontier itself .
8 The comparative information is presented as reported in the financial statements of the prior periods , and additional pro forma information is presented in accordance with the benchmark treatment .
9 Pre-operatively the nurse must check that the patient 's skin is prepared as requested by the surgeon .
10 If the researcher is seen as connected with the authority structures of the institution , will this not have some effect on the behaviour of those being observed ?
11 The recent cognitive revolution in psychology has meant that an individual 's behaviour is now rarely viewed in simple behaviourist terms as solely a product of rewards and punishments , but is seen as influenced by the individual 's own , often idiosyncratic , view of their situation .
12 At other times it may be barely admitted to consciousness , if whatever it was is seen as threatening to the self .
13 Speech production is seen as relying on the reverse process — that is , the ability to translate abstract ideas into speech sounds and to articulate those speech sounds in such a way that they are comprehensible to other people .
14 From the medical perspective , the problem , if it is a ‘ problem ’ , is seen as located in the individual , its origin lying in an innate physiological disorder which brings it into the realm of medical jurisdiction .
15 The South is seen as dominated by the Roman church .
16 An anomaly will be regarded as particularly serious if it is seen as striking at the very fundamentals of a paradigm and yet persistently resists attempts by the members of the normal scientific community to remove it .
17 External pressure for change is seen as mediated through the ‘ micro-politics ’ of school life , a term used to refer to the conflicts and struggles between various interest groups within schools .
18 " that it is desirable that before anything is done as to interfere in the internal arrangement of the School , that application be made to the Goldsmiths ' Company for an additional grant . "
19 As to the future , a good deal of personal injury litigation will disappear if State insurance is introduced as proposed by the Pearson Commission .
20 In this way particularization is viewed as operating in the service of categorization , rather than as the counterpart , which provides the possibility of negation .
21 Putting these sentences into a broader situation reveals that they do not presuppose the same thing and that , in spite of Jespersen 's claim that the infinitive event is represented as occurring before the existence of the gladness , exactly the opposite is the case in the way the speaker represents the situation .
22 It is a settled rule of construction that where there is a grant and an exception out of it the exception is taken as inserted for the benefit of the grantor and is to be construed in favour of the grantee ( Savill Brothers Ltd v Bethell [ 1902 ] 2 Ch 523 ) .
23 In this district lived ‘ Michelagniolo Buonarruoti ’ and Benvenuto di Giovanni Cellini , while Vasari ‘ Giorgino d'Arezzo pictore ’ is recorded as living in the Santa Croce district .
24 In both cases however the infinitive evokes a result — something therefore which is conceived as coming after the actual operation of perception .
25 Secondly , if the heading is read as referring to the California Plan , the term ‘ unworkable ’ is totally incorrect .
26 By the way , despite what Dove is quoted as saying in the note , there is a direct quotation from his ‘ assigned ’ opera , Figaro : in No. 5 , ‘ The Countess Interrupts a Quarrel ’ , after the clarinet has hinted at the Count 's ‘ Contessa , perdono ! ’ , there is his spouse 's ‘ Più docile io sono … ‘ , the second phrase warmly harmonized à la Steve Reich — a little too sweet for my taste I 'm afraid .
27 Instead the action is narrated as perceived by the consciousness of a character or characters .
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