Example sentences of "he [vb -s] it as [art] " in BNC.

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1 He describes it as a steep overhanging wall , with two hard 12 feet sections .
2 At times he is chiefly concerned with democracy as a form of government , when he describes it as a regime in which ‘ the people more or less participate in their government ’ , and says that ‘ its meaning is intimately connected with the idea of political liberty ’ ; while on other occasions he uses the term ‘ democracy ’ to describe a type of society , and refers more broadly to ‘ democratic institutions ’ and by implication to what would later be called a ‘ democratic way of life ’ .
3 He sees it as a weakness of international law that no such machinery exists , and argues that an internationally authorised force should be set up by the UN Security Council to intervene in rogue states on various continents .
4 And although Platinum has , like the spreadsheet solution that preceded it , some limitations , he sees it as a good basis for future developments .
5 Langland 's imaginative perception of Will 's growth from experiencing this tension as destructive to a state where he sees it as the opportunity for love parallels the written witness of the mystics .
6 Economically , he sees it as the difference between the hare and the tortoise : the free market model with its exciting instability , its romantic success stories , its idealistic zeal ; the social market with its patient , unspectacular , benign growth , and its cultural cohesion .
7 If the utilitarian looks at it in this way , he takes it as a criterion for an acceptable use of ethical words , and way of understanding moral judgement , that it should give them a factual content which is the only one which it is sensible to expect people in general to endorse as a sensible guide to acceptable conduct .
8 He remembers it as a mining village/town in decline as the coal seam was coming to an end , a depressed working-class community in which sectarianism was rife .
9 He regards it as a way forward for the museum and a means of providing a window for many more people on Britain 's scientific and technological expertise .
10 While it needs to be developed in terms of the production of ideologies by class formations , he regards it as a corrective to the view , often attributed to the sociology of knowledge , that a particular ideology belongs to a class .
11 And it is a characteristic of Richard Branson that wherever he is , he regards it as a party , and has usually done his best to make it such by the addition of as many people as possible .
12 He regards it as the greatest force at man 's disposal .
13 He regards it as the Big Smoke .
14 In the end he presents it as a solution to the problem which he had been set but it is really nothing of the sort .
15 On the other hand , if he makes it as an international tighthead , that line-out capability will prove a handsome bonus as well as his ballast in a Scottish scrummage which has struggled of late .
16 Moscovici ( 1983 : 32–3 ) does not entirely neglect particularization but , interestingly , he treats it as a means of anchoring or classification , rather than as a means of ‘ turning round ’ our schemata , to use Bartlett 's appropriate phrase ( Bartlett , 1932 ) .
17 Instead he positions it as a developers box and claims that demand is strong .
18 Instead he positions it as a developers box and claims that demand is strong .
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