Example sentences of "saw [pron] as an [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Such organizations are usually referred to as bureaucracies and much contemporary analysis is derived from the work of the German sociologist Max Weber , who saw them as an essential element of contemporary capitalism .
2 It was perhaps typical of du Cann , who saw himself as an archetypal operator , that he should try to do both simultaneously .
3 The CLB , founded by W. M. Gee , an ex-Volunteer officer and secretary of the Junior Branch of the Church of England Temperance Society , saw itself as an Anglican institution for the ‘ care and training of lads in Religion , Morals and Physique ’ during the important years prior to manhood .
4 Given its origins , the NUR saw itself as an industrial union ; originally it organized most groups of BR workers , and it continues to be recognized by BR as representing all grades of staff other than management .
5 She saw herself as an unlikeable person .
6 For Dorothea suddenly saw herself as an old woman badgering a friend into giving up her time and company , and , self-sufficient as she had always been , the picture repelled her .
7 He was very generous and his friendship was abused by many who saw him as an easy touch financially .
8 Tonight for the first time she saw him as an attractive young man rather than as a boss .
9 In that too I saw him as an obvious heir to the boys of the old Paris suburbs ’ ( p. 143 ) .
10 A similar point was made by the seventeenth-century philosopher John Locke , who saw it as an insoluble mystery .
11 Whatever it was , the Regent saw it as an unlooked-for opportunity .
12 He saw it as an economic drain and realised its damaging effect on Moscow 's international relations .
13 Many saw it as an ideal opportunity for the Prince and Princess to put on a united front , quashing speculation over their marriage .
14 Critics of the report saw it as an old-style socialist attempt to plan the future of an industry , without due regard to market forces .
15 While O'Neill and his supporters represented that visit as the Republic s de facto recognition that the North did exist as a separate entity and that doing necessary economic business with the North meant the Republic attenuating its claims to the territory of Ulster , the conservative Protestants saw it as an horrendous betrayal of the history and sacrifice of Ulster Protestants .
16 ‘ I saw it as an exciting challenge and a chance to be nearer the business .
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