Example sentences of "[verb] as provide [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The professionalisation of management in the late 1950s and early 1960s coincided with other economic trends , which may be seen as providing fertile ground for the seeds of the search industry .
2 An informal survey of the lunchtime customers suggests that the hotel is well established as a meeting place and that the lunches are seen as providing good value .
3 At first , new multi-disciplinary machinery and the procedures associated with it were seen as providing social workers with the necessary change of perspective .
4 The outcome of these cases is that the Chinese wall has not been seen as providing satisfactory protection for the interests of the former client and , despite the existence of a Chinese wall , the courts have required the law firms not to act on behalf of the new client .
5 The school is acknowledged as providing equal access and entitlement to a rich and varied curriculum .
6 Whilst the 60MHz iteration ca n't be clocked any faster , the 66MHz mask is designed to go to 100MHz and it is this part , touted as providing two-to-three times the performance of the 80486 , which Intel will use as a springboard for the launch of other Pentium family members — see back page .
7 Clash or interference in other regions can be identified as providing unspecified relationships which can be signalled as violations in the agreed design .
8 The different sets might therefore be regarded as providing criterion-referenced information with respect to specific grammatical sub-skills .
9 As the Swann Report says ( again with reference to Multicultural Education ) , ‘ It is important to recognise however that permeation alone can not be regarded as providing adequate provision for the kind of teaching which we have advocated … . without additional specialist course work , both compulsory and optional ’ ( DES , 1985 : 559 ) .
10 It is true that Morris contains no disapproval or qualification of Lawrence , but , in my view , the main statements of principle in these cases can not possibly be reconciled and the later case therefore must not be regarded as providing any support for the earlier .
11 Carr-Hill and Stern ( 1979 ) are usually quoted as providing clear evidence that unemployment and crime are not related .
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