Example sentences of "see it [prep] an [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Q : I think that is because people see it as an act of desperation when an actress agrees to appear in a nude magazine like Playboy . |
2 | ‘ I see it as an expression of style , ’ he says . |
3 | ‘ I see it as an opportunity rather than a pressure , ’ Roxburgh said . |
4 | Rather than see this as a problem , the particle physicists see it as an opportunity . |
5 | Speaking immediately after his election , John Young said : ‘ I am honoured and delighted to be elected Deputy Vice President and I see it as an opportunity to contribute to some of the serious issues facing the profession , and to represent a body with which I have been involved for much of my life . |
6 | So what what I 'm that that that 's the sort of basic outline and I see it as an opportunity of putting the name in front of quite a lot of schools |
7 | ‘ Ravenscraig has been described as one of the biggest environmental challenges in Europe but we also see it as an opportunity to establish Lanarkshire as a world leader in the field of environmental technology . |
8 | Whereas most theories of the state view it as providing certain services which promote the welfare of the society , they see it as an instrument of repression which is used by the ruling class to maintain the status quo . |
9 | Some organizations see it as an extension of their production process , others as the means by which their product or service is brought to the attention of the marketplace . |
10 | " I definitely see it as an extension of the house . |
11 | I see it as an investment in them and the company reaps the reward . |
12 | They have exempted it from public expenditure cuts because they see it as an investment for the future . |
13 | They no doubt see it as an incentive to do well for their client , and here in the free market lawyers solicit not only in court but in the newspapers , offering $95 divorces and other cut price rates . |
14 | They see it as an indication that workers are moving out of jobs where they are no longer very efficient to areas where they are more productive . |
15 | There seems at this point to be disagreement among the regulationists , with some hypothesizing that the decentralization within Britain was the beginning of a new phase of ( neo-Fordist ) accumulation ( Aglietta , 1979 ; Dunford , Geddes and Perrons , 1981 ) , while others ( Martin , 1988 ; Marshall , 1987 ) clearly see it as an attempt to use geographical restructuring to prolong the life of Fordism . |