Example sentences of "had [verb] him as [art] " in BNC.

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1 He gestured across the lawn that ran down to a stream and then up again to his own cottage , which Thomas had given him as a wedding present .
2 And then , suddenly , I had to see him as a MAN — my husband !
3 He indicated to Haussmann that the form of the railway station , a huge open space covered by glass , had impressed him as a possible model and as a result of the Emperor 's predilections , and Baltard 's skill , the great new market of Les Halles was built in a light , airy combination of iron , stone and glass .
4 He had seemed certain to become the first black Tory MP , representing Cheltenham — Norman Tebbit had tipped him as the first black cabinet minister and there 'd even been the odd hint that he might one day inhabit No 10 .
5 But then , afterwards , I learned that the other members of the party had accepted him as a bachelor and he had gone along with that . ’
6 He could only assume that , being unaware of his true status as a DIA agent , the DEA and its oversight agency , the FBI , had seen him as a soft target , and framed the passport violation charge as a means of silencing an awkward witness without realizing who he was or the damage they were doing .
7 He was as perfect to her now as he had been when she had seen him as a child .
8 Serfaty , who used to dismiss the human rights movement as bourgeois liberalism , then heard from his family that Amnesty International had adopted him as a prisoner of conscience , jailed for the peaceful expression of his political ideas .
9 They were all thin people — there 'd almost have been room for a fourth person in the double his parents had bought him as a wedding present , so getting three people in it was certainly not an impossibility .
10 His friend Dr Burney , not a Cambridge man , expressed similar concern at Smart 's lack of discretion : ‘ While he was the pride of Cambridge and the chief poetical ornament of that University , he ruined himself by returning the tavern treats of strangers who had invited him as a wit and an extraordinary personage , in order to boast of his acquaintance ’ .
11 It was not until the oriental had addressed the armed newcomer with the blackened face , that the two youngsters had recognised him as the private detective Brett Grant .
12 Chris had reconstructed him as a man .
13 When she had seen him first , she had marked him as a " bully " , one of those who kept the brothel girls in line .
14 Yet it never occurred to John , as his mother aged , that she might be in need of any help , until a visitor from Johannesburg , who had known him as a boy , told him that she was hard up , after which lie made her an allowance .
15 Barbara was wonderful : unlike some people who had known him as a child , she treated him as an adult .
16 I went to Dubai and called on several prominent figures who had known him as a local businessman .
17 He had found him as a young officer in the Prenzlauer Berg division when he was no more than eighteen , but he already had a considerable appetite for the harsh and cruel police work that the Stasi required .
18 His uncle had entered him as a subscriber onto the Royal Exchange , Manchester , and made him a partner .
19 Hawk nodded to his father , the man who had tutored him as a Dreamwalker , and was not acknowledged .
20 Margot Iverson had struck him as a very controlled woman .
21 Hauser had struck him as a man who moved with great caution .
22 Oh , and the victim , Yankel Rosenbaum , a lawyer , had identified him as the killer before he died .
23 In his twelve years in Paris Modigliani had painted portraits almost exclusively and had lost the ‘ habit of contemplating landscape ’ that had fired him as a boy .
24 The audience who had loved him as a stage juvenile were themselves growing old , and could not fail to notice the signs of ageing in their idol .
25 She had wanted it preserved and she had chosen him as a means to this end .
26 A former wartime lieutenant in the Lithuanian police , Anton Gecas , on July 17 lost a £600,000 libel case against the United Kingdom Scottish Television company which had described him as a war criminal .
27 Dorothy Allen , his agent , had described him as a ’ quite remarkable ’ fellow and so , personably and articulately , it proved .
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