Example sentences of "[noun] of view the " in BNC.

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1 Eliot seems to have ignored these suggestions because for him the physical and social landscape of London was no more than a screen on which to project a phantasmagoria that expressed his own personal disorders and desperations ( partly sexual , as one might expect , and as the drafts make clear ) ; whereas Pound seems to have supposed that the subject of the poem was London in all its historical and geographical actuality , much as the city of Dublin was from one point of view the subject of Joyce 's Ulysses .
2 But from the firm 's point of view the local sales of a subsidiary are as much foreign sales as any export is .
3 From the Communist point of view the witch-hunts and loyalty tests of the United States must have looked like the little puffs of smoke and flame of a stage dragon which fooled nobody .
4 From the learner 's point of view the most valuable part of this book consists of the 49 problems and answers .
5 From an ecological point of view the maritime , calcareous dune and pasture areas provide zones of exceptional richness and diversity ; a diversity that is enhanced by the system of non-intensive agriculture ( Roberts , Kerr and Seaton , 1959 ) and the close juxtaposition of moorland , loch and marshland habitats .
6 From their point of view the results are rather disappointing .
7 But if the bad effects are on the body , and the good effects are on the gene alone , from the body 's point of view the net effect is all bad . )
8 From society 's point of view the only question is whether those who had the benefit of these excellent libraries in the forces will have the same access to books when they leave .
9 From an animal welfare point of view the chasing of a fox or a deer round the countryside with dogs and followed by men either on foot or mounted on horses is a cruel practice which can not be justified .
10 Times are hard , and from the employees ' point of view the possibility of something is better than the certainty of nothing .
11 From a practical point of view the cost of administration can often make interest charging and collecting more of a minus than a plus .
12 Having said that , however , I have to say that from a Christian point of view the Hayekian ( or Friedmanian ) system is fundamentally at variance with what I conceive of as a Christian view of reality .
13 Hunting may well have been seen as a pleasurable distraction , but from a practical point of view the bow and arrow is more useful .
14 It was a fascinating experience but from the climbing point of view the ratios were n't terribly good .
15 From mankind 's point of view the varying configurations of these 329 million cubic miles present a variety of conveniences and opportunities .
16 From the profoundly deaf child 's point of view the non-verbal is part of BSL , so the last two ‘ channels ’ are the same , and since the child does not hear effectively , the oral/aural ‘ channel ’ is also primarily visual .
17 From the engineering point of view the hardware technology is central and the operators tag along supporting the activity of machines which are basically doing the work .
18 From this point of view the allocation of function and interface design are one core design activity based on the man-machine concept .
19 From the AIB point of view the exercise meant devoting the time and effort of a number of experienced personnel to activities that served no benefit to the Branch .
20 From this point of view the French have never regarded fascism as an aberration , concurring rather with Césaire and Fanon that it can be explained quite simply as European colonialism brought home to Europe by a country that had been deprived of its overseas empire after World War I. French poststructuralism , therefore , involves a critique of reason as a system of domination comparable to that of the Frankfurt School , but rather than setting up the possibility of a purged reason operating in an unblocked , ideal speech situation as a defence against tyranny and coercion in the manner of a Habermas , it reanalyses the operations of reason as such .
21 As Levi-Strauss was to argue , different histories have different temporalities : the time scales of the sciences do not work at the same pace as other forms of history : they have their own dynamic , their own rhythm , their own times , sometimes fast , sometimes slow , that do not operate by the ordinary round of the year ; Bachelard was fond of pointing out that from a scientific point of view the ten years from 1920 to 1930 were as long an era as the previous five hundred .
22 From the client 's point of view the assessment provides an opportunity to express their difficulties in a structured manner , and make links between specific problems and various areas of their life , both past and present .
23 The projected campaigns will provide the opportunity to study the work of little-known and undervalued artists like Niccolò Martinelli , called il Trombetta , a late Mannerist follower of the Zuccari , who executed the absidal frescoes in Santa Maria in Aracoeli : ‘ From a cultural point of view the restoration of these works will be of great importance ’ , says the Soprintendente .
24 From the particle point of view the result is less obvious .
25 From the patient 's point of view the medical profession still appears divided about the main causes of heart attacks ; there is the stress lobby , the cigarette lobby and the exercise lobby .
26 From a social policy point of view the issue is not whether to allow pollution , but how much pollution to allow ( see Ackerman et al. , 1974 ) .
27 From a socialist point of view the government was barren , yet incomes policy and fiscal restraint were beginning to produce their intended effects and the expansion of world trade was benefiting the economy .
28 From a sociological point of view the official figures on wealth are not ideal .
29 From this point of view the middle class is held to consist of non-manual workers .
30 From a Weberian point of view the professions can be seen as occupational groups which have succeeded in controlling and manipulating the labour market in such a way that they can maximize their rewards .
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