Example sentences of "[pers pn] see [det] [noun sg] as " in BNC.

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1 Taking the radical students ' ideals at face-value one might have expected them to see this incident as yet another example of oppression by a fascist regime and protest against it — after all , they protested enough when it used such methods against its own people .
2 What is this anthropomorphism , and why do I see this landscape as male ?
3 While she concedes the broad outline of the developmental model — a model which proceeds from an egocentric through a societal to a universal perspective — she sees this development as taking place , in the case of women , within a special moral conception .
4 She sees this course as explicitly challenging some of the accepted norms of the rest of the course .
5 And we see that strategy as having succeeded .
6 The problem with their evolutionary sequence does not lie so much with what they say about technology as what they saw this technology as implying .
7 Hegel 's Idealism is ‘ absolute ’ in that it sees all reality as gathered up in the all-encompassing , impersonal Mind which is God .
8 The ideal needs integrity , however , for a citizen can not treat himself as the author of a collection of laws that are inconsistent in principle , nor can he see that collection as sponsored by any Rousseauian general will .
9 But he sees such expression as running contrary to the dominant idiom and cultural meaning in which users of the language are socialised and as therefore not what the anthropologist is trying to make sense of .
10 Although he sees this struggle as being primarily concerned with economic resources , it can also involve struggles for prestige and for political power .
11 And he sees this change as demonstrating a ‘ transformation of eroticism from manipulation to expression ’ .
12 He saw this society as increasingly menaced by industrialization which , particularly in the cities , where power was now centralized , was cutting off the population from its roots .
13 He saw this corruption as affecting ministers , the civil service and the House of Commons .
14 Boniface was looking back to an age in which the privileges of the churches of the Anglo-Saxons had been untouched and inviolate , or so it was thought , and he saw this age as ending — as he tells Aethelbald — in the time of Ceolred , king of the Mercians , and Osred , king of the Northumbrians ( both of whose reigns ended in 716 ) , whom Boniface accuses of behaving as Aethelbald was now doing and as a consequence of which they both perished miserably .
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