Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] as [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 So what do I see as the problems in how the industry appeals to the children of today ?
2 And once I remember — I very faintly remember — that I flew as the buzzards and the ravens fly and all the great sky was mine .
3 I now come to what I regard as the plaintiffs ' most convincing argument , namely , that paragraph 33 of Buckley J. 's order , combined with the letter dated 23 October 1991 from the Crown Prosecution Service , provides effective protection for the defendants against the criminal consequences of having to disclose incriminating information or documents by virtue of paragraphs 18(a) and ( c ) and 19(a) and ( c ) of the order .
4 What was your priorities when you were doing that , what were your priorities as far as , was it to get it all down or was it just to get in down in a particular way what what do you see as the priorities when you were talking about doing it ?
5 What do you see as the advantages of Reddin 's 3-D Theory over the Managerial Grid of Blake and Mouton ?
6 What do you see as the advantages and disadvantages of the use of the following in the handling of routine office-work :
7 It was silent , relentless , always going as hard as we could — I was virtually holding you clear as the blows , they felt like blows , pummelled you .
8 Whilst she frequently attacks Marxism and Communism , it is not simple political opposition , but rather an attack on what she sees as the effects of the spread of Marxism for Christianity , for ‘ it is of no mean significance that the secular/humanist/Marxist philosophy makes the destruction of Christianity one of its main priorities .
9 Anyone can help by making a clear list of what he or she sees as the consequences of the sufferer 's drinking .
10 I think the army thought they were going in to a situation where they could they could help , they saw themselves if you like as the referees er as a neutral party in between two sides .
11 A physiotherapist talked , for instance , of what she saw as the consequences of a young person complying or not with recommended regimes :
12 Another outlined what she saw as the consequences :
13 So , after all this , what do you foresee as the consequences for hip hop , Chuck Brown , Tashan , Alexander O'Neal ?
14 And er when did you start as a firearms officer ?
15 If we find cognisance flourishing where there is a set of actions as restricted as those of Christy Nolan 's , then how can reality be something that we posit as the limits of action : in this case a poor actor should have a correspondingly poor grasp of the real .
16 It is said they were led along the secret paths by a traitor , these paths almost certainly being what we know as the Pilgrims , Way to Aylesford .
17 Like Cobbett , many suffragettes would have said that it was not so much the vote for its own sake that they sought as the improvements in the status and conditions of women which they believe would be achieved as the result of women 's enfranchisement .
18 A later ( later in terms of the Quarto numbering , that is ) example of this type of sonnet , with its disgusted ‘ withdrawal of the Poet ’ gesture , is 95 : The exclamatory style , the notably affectionate gestures , the epithets of praise ( ‘ sweet and lovely ’ , ‘ sweets ’ , ‘ beauty 's veil ’ in line 11 ) almost convince us that the Friend 's personal attractiveness can somehow transmute evil to good , a form of paradoxical hyperbole that Shakespeare gives to Lepidus , attempting to excuse Antony 's faults to Caesar : ‘ His faults in him seem as the spots of heaven , /More fiery by night 's blackness ’ ( Antony and Cleopatra , I.iv.13f ) .
19 What do they see as the advantages when they want to expand their manufacturing ?
20 Will they feature as the attendants and train-bearers of the classics or in ‘ special ’ roles , such as the Moor in Petrushka ?
21 R.R. Darlington stressed that the ecclesiastical content of several tenth-century law codes suggests that they originated as the canons of synods. Æthelstan 's first code , for example , and his Ordinance on Charities , both say that they were framed on the advice of Archbishop Wulfhelm of Canterbury and other bishops , and the text known as I Edmund appears from its prologue to be a set of decisions taken purely by the ecclesiastical wing of the witan ( royal council ) ; they may eventually have been issued as a royal decree , but that I Edmund in its surviving form is something other than this is implied by the fifth chapter , which exhorts the king to put churches in order .
22 Those who compete successfully under what they saw as the rules of the game — that is , to obtain O-level qualifications , find the rules have changed ; A levels had become the required entry into those jobs offering the greatest upward social mobility .
23 Some women in early adulthood may feel very unmaternal and not at all sure whether they wish to burden themselves with what they see as the cares and stresses of parenthood .
24 Marxists , for example have criticised what they see as the shortcomings of both ‘ bourgeois ’ political science and sociology .
25 They are typically determined to bring about change , to introduce reforms and to reverse what they see as the mistakes of the past .
26 He laughs as the figures , unable to resist , are subjected to the torments they most fear .
27 He locates the origins of the sociology of knowledge in the work of Hegel and Marx , whom he regarded as the philosophers most prominent and influential in the historicist tradition .
28 While recognizing that poor local economic management was partly to blame for the region 's debt crisis , the report argued that what it described as the banks ' irresponsible lending practices meant they should also share responsibility and assume greater losses .
29 In his opening address Diouf pledged firm action against what he described as the dangers of " secessionism and fundamentalism of all kinds " , a reference to the mounting insurgency in Casamance province [ see below ] .
30 The inductance variation is present in all Stepping motors : in variable.reluctance types it occurs as the teeth on the rotor and stator move into and out of alignment ; in permanent-magnet types it occurs as the rotating magnet flux changes the saturation level in the stator teeth ; and in hybrid types both effects contribute to the inductance variations .
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