Example sentences of "[am/are] [adv] see as [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Thus even in a situation where Creole is permitted , none may in fact be spoken — or if it is , it may be limited to ritualised tokens such as the tags man , guy and star , which , though they lie within the boundaries of the folk concept " Patois " are best seen as part of the language of black-influenced youth culture . |
2 | People are largely seen as victims . |
3 | I do n't know that the school 's is the right vehicle for this because in many ways , the children who are getting into these things pay more attention to the peer group , and it 's more important to have community groups , community cafes , things which are not seen as authority getting at them . |
4 | Left-wing militancy a–d more especially the left-ward lurch of the Socialist Party are thus seen as responses to right-wing intransigence , and the right as bearing the main responsibility for political breakdown , ever-worsening social conflict , and ultimately , civil war . |
5 | These jobs are usually seen as benefits , certainly by the workers who flock to take them up , and by the governments that have established incentive programmes to attract them in the first place . |
6 | More despressingly , however , it seems that while men can be bastards with impunity , eminent women are still seen as failures if they are not lovable and self-effacing as well as efficient and achieving . |
7 | They are essentially problems of the youngster concerned but , in becoming matters of concern for the parents , they are automatically seen as problems in the youngster . |
8 | The prisoners themselves are often seen as failures , who ought to be made to support their families , though the system does little to help bring that about . |
9 | Obviously larger employers might be considered part of the upper class , but the others are often seen as part of the ‘ old ’ middle class . |
10 | Within this perceptual framework , White women are frequently seen as agents in the narrative disruption which Black people initiate : it is the ‘ skirts ’ whose sexuality in one form or another is out of control or misplaced . |
11 | Also , their efforts are invariably seen as vanity projects . |
12 | The ‘ social ’ factors of which Millett writes are here seen as pressures which are ‘ external ’ to the self , and which have the effect of thwarting the conscious and unitary rationality of female individuality , or the female ego . |
13 | The Hebrew name indicates " peace " or " well-being " , and these sacrifices are sometimes seen as communion or fellowship rites . |