Example sentences of "the [adj] view [conj] " in BNC.

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1 There are others who can see only the broad view and the general thrust of an operation .
2 These figures , perhaps , go some way to dispute the widely-expressed view that Pipe is the greatest jump trainer in racing history .
3 At this point , planning provided little guidance to what would follow ; the difficulties of extemporizing new manoeuvres were enormous and helped to reinforce the prevailing view that the overriding aim must be an early victory obtained essentially by good initial deployment .
4 The problem is further exacerbated by the prevailing view as to the nature and constituents of leadership in schools .
5 The identification of family authority over children with the interests of the state is strongly aligned with the political view that the family should be encouraged to accept total responsibility for its members .
6 The classic view that someone will ‘ grow into the job ’ may well be fully vindicated .
7 At the top of the Alps they were able to rest and enjoy the blue sky , the panoramic view and the sense of looking down from on top of the world .
8 The growing central controls on the curriculum , and other aspects of state schooling , has to a considerable extent been grounded on a concern with the quality of teaching , and the associated view that improving the quality of education is dependent on improving the quality of teaching .
9 Soviet interest was aroused by the Iranian view that ‘ there will have to be guarantees that neither the Americans nor American surrogates substitute for the departing Russians ’ , that the problem of Afghanistan should not be solved in the East/West context .
10 On Nov. 15 the Kuwaiti government-in-exile endorsed the Saudi view that an Arab summit at this time would be pointless .
11 He takes the understandable view that it is for him to take the first steps in Russia , which he is doing to keep the scientists in Russia .
12 This silhouette can then be inserted into the engineering file , rotated and scaled to give the working view as shown in Figure 6.18 .
13 James , however , held the unwavering view that it was amongst the weak and the exploited where one had to look for the root of historical change .
14 Meanwhile , there are those who will cling to the cock-eyed view that the glorious uncertainty of the human eye in these matters is good enough .
15 Sin and sex do somehow go together and this seems to tie in with the distinction I made much earlier on between the scientific view that man differs from other animals only in degree and the religious view that there is an essential difference in kind .
16 The first task was to correct the public view that the product was more expensive than it actually was .
17 Any major broker must be in the U K because er er they are exposed to the public view if you like , and if there are any errors or , or deceptions then they 're likely to come up very quickly .
18 Given the widely-held view that foreign language teaching ‘ failed ’ in this country ( e.g. D.E.S. , 1986 ; 2 ) it is important for teachers ' understanding of their work and their own self- esteem that they should know about societal attitudes to languages .
19 We adopt , therefore , an approach which might appropriately be termed the unorthodox view as opposed to what could be called the traditional view .
20 The film contradicts the popular view that GWR 's management was exemplary in the way that it dealt with its staff .
21 Carl N. Degler , using evidence from women of the urban middle class in America ( the class to which Acton 's work was directed ) , together with a survey of married women 's sexual attitudes begun in the 1890s by Dr C. D. Mosher , argues that it was more an ideology seeking to be established than the prevalent view or practice of even middle-class women .
22 He took the opportunity to bring forward again the British view that West German rearmament could easily be achieved , and with the necessary level of supervision to quell the worries of France and others , within NATO itself .
23 The State Department on the whole supported the conclusion of an early treaty and was sympathetic to the British view that the indefinite prolongation of the occupation would be counter-productive politically and would encounter growing resentment from the Japanese people .
24 The British view that membership of the EEC was in essence about trade persisted through the signing in 1986 of the Single European Act , though in this case even the main text that was agreed ranged rather wider than the limits that the British had set themselves .
25 Contrary to the French view that the forthcoming inter-governmental conference on EC unity will complete its agenda by late 1991 , the Prime Minister insisted ‘ no time limit is set for its work . ’
26 It is possible that those who work in education , even at senior management level , lack the confidence to press for this sort of recognition ; a diffidence which has its origin in the perceived ‘ otherness ’ referred to above , combined with the erroneous view that education has little or nothing to offer a commercial board-room .
27 So he concludes that ordinary moral judgements express the erroneous view that there are objective features of the world which intrinsically ( and not merely because , as a matter of contingent fact , we respond to them in certain ways ) require something of us .
28 He argued against the linear view and stated that the study of history could only be understood through an intuitive understanding of spiritual destiny , rather than the material cause and effect relationship of modern science .
29 In other words , the old view that women 's crime is physically explainable would still appear to be influential , despite the fact that there is no real evidence for such explanations .
30 ( 1981 ) reaffirms the old view that a major concealed Variscan thrust controls the Vale of Pewsey anticline , and so by inference the Ham and Kingsclere anticlines .
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