Example sentences of "have a [adj] view [prep] " in BNC.

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1 We must never have a simplistic view of suffering .
2 Through the windows you should have a good view of the RCA tower and the Hilton hotel .
3 There may well be teachers in the school who will not be convinced that teaching is about anything other than delivering the curriculum and will have a restricted view of their role as professionals .
4 I and we er do n't have a concluded view on the matter but it is something that I think that we need to look at .
5 If we have not realized that the source of personhood and community lies in the being of God as Father , Son and Holy Spirit , then the odds are that we will have a low view of human life and of relationships .
6 Managers of bureaux must have a wide view of how the CAB functions both locally and nationally .
7 They oversimplify the richness of reality and are , therefore , ignored by managers who must have a holistic view of situations and who , unlike some economists , can not wish reality away by ignoring the facts and instead expound on the theories … .
8 Its bed and furniture were entirely homely , however , and perhaps not as dainty as the elegant young French lady might like , but it did have a nice view of the hustle and bustle of Newington Butts , and Mrs Beavis always reckoned that if you could see life going on from your window , you could n't grumble too much about not having dainty furniture .
9 The vice-chancellors should enlist its support , but the universities must first have a clear view of what is needed in the future , and the model need not be uniform .
10 The girls declined their gentlemanly offer to allow them over first , realising that once at the top , the boys would have a beautiful view of their unmentionables .
11 Men and women who grew up during the swinging sixties may have a different view of sexual fidelity from those who are slightly older .
12 They would have a different view about which more concrete conception provided the best justification of coercion , and so would have a different view of the implicit extension of the abstract convention in question .
13 They would have a different view about which more concrete conception provided the best justification of coercion , and so would have a different view of the implicit extension of the abstract convention in question .
14 A mineworker may have a valuable view of the effect of the General Strike on his pit , and in his town , but may know little of the broader picture .
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