Example sentences of "[conj] see them [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Feminist psychology also finds it difficult to deal with apparent irrationalities in women 's subjectivity except by pathologizing the women , or seeing them as social victims .
2 Why are they resisting those arguments , or seeing them as concessions that might be made during negotiations ?
3 Or see them through an abortion ,
4 I have 200m shares , nothing would please me more than to see them at £1 each . ’
5 But the men reacted to the women " on the basis of sex solidarity rather than seeing them as part of the working class ' .
6 Jonathan Burnham describes Power Feminism as ‘ a manifesto for a new generation of women , offering a feminism based on powerful roles for women rather than seeing them as victims ’ .
7 Our notion of Indians has been conditioned by the frontier mentality that saw them as savages inhabiting the geographic void that civilisation would tame .
8 Because to see someone is to see them as a human being and to see them as a human being is to acknowledge them as such .
9 He was fun with the children when they were younger , too , telling them stories about life in the countryside , taking them out — ‘ go all over the place with him , yes ’ — and seeing them to bed : ‘ he always give us a piggyback up the stairs to bed . ’
10 The man looked at the boys as if seeing them for the first time .
11 Julius looked at her jeans and T-shirt , as if seeing them for the first time .
12 Eddie 's gaze ran on round the room , taking in , as if seeing them for the first time , the stool and easel , the framed reproduction Leonardo drawings on the walls , the low divan bed .
13 We are all impressed by the Gurkhas , and anyone who has visited Nepal and seen them in operation is even more impressed .
14 They say I must come and see them on their new organic farm — more land , less house , says Johnson .
15 Oh I 've just got ta go and see them at sa when they get it .
16 ‘ I might go and see them in Edinburgh tomorrow as well . ’
17 But Branson , 42 , does not want the simulators sitting idle and sees them as a new money-spinner .
18 In his mind 's eye the epic narrator visualizes the personages and events that he is to describe , and sees them as something independent of and outside himself .
19 And when he comes to the richer and more respectable inmates of the borough who can veil their defects behind money , he remains sardonic , and sees them as poor people who have not been found out .
20 Again , he tackles , in The Conquest of Happiness , the roots of human unhappiness , and sees them in an excessive introversion , in an excessive concern with the mechanisms of one 's own mind , and proposes various ways in which people can seek to extract themselves from this introverted obsession with their own mechanisms .
21 In Themis she stressed the need for group rather than individual values in conducting life and saw them as the foundation of religion .
22 when we erm , er when we were doing those projects we erm , we had a comments book and more , more people were in favour of them and saw them as an improvement to the town and so it needs something that 's really interesting actually , it 's er , erm the work 's department have said , as a result of those graffiti projects they can shift two officer 's from the graffiti team to the highway 's team , so it 's actually cut down on the work of actually clearing up unwanted graffiti , so it 's had a positive effect , so we , we 've got these two people work with the other people and we 've got Dorothy who 's working with , with black people and ethnic minorities in the town and erm for people who were here when this presentation was last given , er Robin who used to be in the local The Policy Team of the Local Government Unit is now actually a Community Development Officer , one of the decision 's , Robin use to do video work for the Authority erm , and we decided we asset whether the the need for that kind of , k ind of work to continue , and we thought on balance not erm and he now is running the music rehearsal space over at Latton Bush , that again is a project for young people , to enable , it 's a place where band 's can practice and that 's the problem in Harlow erm and er that 's really exciting project because it 's bringing in a lot of income for the Council as as well as providing the service that people want and , and it , I mean it is important at this time that we are doing limited projects where we are bringing in income , cos at , you know we estimate that erm we can get that erm rehearsal space properly resource , that project could be self financing , so your providing a service but your also getting paid , your getting paid for as well , so erm that is who we are now and were er , where were located , we have an open door policy as people will know .
23 He came to the station and saw them into the carriage .
24 Hemmings nodded and Elaine pulled herself from her chair and saw them to the door .
25 They stood to leave and as an afterthought Cobalt got up , too , and saw them to the door .
26 only had this sprung on me er today er when I went in to the Hall and and and saw them with a notice and a table collecting signatures .
27 Must go back to the kids and see them to the bus .
28 May be better to telephone the potential purchaser and see them to ‘ explore ’ the expression of interest
29 May be better to telephone the potential purchaser and see them to ‘ explore ’ the expression of interest
30 While some senior policemen , like Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Kenneth Newman , wanted to stress the link between the police and other areas of ‘ social policy ’ ( Metropolitan Police , 1986 ) , the official government response attempted to decontextualize the riots and see them as the actions of a small minority who were either criminalized or influenced by extreme political ideas .
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