Example sentences of "must [be] seen [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The social world must be seen through the actors ' eyes because it depends on how they see it and it works in whatever way social capacities are exercised .
2 With older sufferers , erm , usually families are excluded from treatment , they 're kept out , they 're told that they 're daughter erm must be seen on her own and they feel very helpless and very unloved and unsupported by by the professionals .
3 His genesis was part of a much longer creative process and must be seen as the culmination of eleven centuries of English literary history .
4 Thus what Strange calls sterling 's role as a ‘ negotiated ’ currency — a top currency on the slide , which has to be constantly defended — emerged enormously strengthened from the Attlee period , and this must be seen as a major part of the legacy of that government .
5 ‘ The belugas ’ plight must be seen as a warning that marine life in general is threatened .
6 Taken all in all , though , it must be seen as the greatest of all the pending threats to present day life .
7 Abroad they must be seen as great statesmen anxious to build peacemaking bridges between East and West .
8 Thus domestic service must be seen as a type of economic relationship operating in all levels of society .
9 The Circular emphasises that parents must be seen as ‘ partners ’ in the assessment process , although the evidence is that parents are by no means equal partners here .
10 Given Israel 's inability to sustain large casualties this must be seen as a weapon of similarly fearsome proportions to Israel 's own nuclear capacity .
11 If the patient is unconscious and will never regain consciousness , or is suffering from a progressive or fatal illness , then the respirator must be seen as heroic treatment and may be turned off , as in the case of Karen Quinlan , when it is no longer of any lasting benefit .
12 A further requirement is that the task or role which you are prepared to delegate must be seen as an important one .
13 The construction of 28 new towns after 1946 , housing more than 1.1 million people by 1987 ( Potter , 1987 ) , must be seen as the major positive achievement of town and country planning in the UK .
14 The information resulting from resource management must be seen as an open system available to be discussed in a safe atmosphere but one which seeks for improvements .
15 Taken in isolation such a remark would not be significant , but in a speech which had mentioned the two institutions with which Stalin and Trotsky had been most closely associated , this reference to the Red Army must be seen as nudge and wink towards Trotsky .
16 Of these , the 4I B Millardet and the So 4 both promote an early ripening of grapes , while the So 4 must be seen as the most effective in terms of drought resistance , suitability to the humid conditions of Champagne and increased yields .
17 The whole phenomenon of the Industrial Revolution must be seen as a cumulative process , resulting in an economic take-off at the end of the eighteenth century under the stimulus of the Napoleonic Wars .
18 The view of the early church , which Aulén insists must be seen as the classic theory , he calls the ‘ dramatic ’ .
19 It would be impertinent to suggest that Keynes dichotomised his private and professional life and in this sense discretionary monetary policy and deficit spending by government although recommended as a technical solution to a technical problem , must be seen as the prescriptions of a self-confessed immoralist .
20 Janice was certainly helped by the sympathetic understanding of her fellow teachers , but the fact that she stayed and weathered the storm had much to do with her deeply held conviction that work must be seen as service .
21 It 's not a giant step , but any demonstration of a willingness to accept outside assistance must be seen as a positive move .
22 Training must be seen as part of a wider programme of change and development of the institution as a whole .
23 This too , however , must be seen as a presentation of the lives of human beings , which is useful perhaps for taxation purposes but bears little resemblance to the real world .
24 In a comparable way , our concept of the individual must be seen as the conjuncture of the various practices which make up the complex whole .
25 Rather , they must be seen as sets of roles which , as soon as they exist , exploit one another and are thus engaged in the class struggle .
26 If so , the problems we have surveyed must be seen as symptoms rather than causes ‘ more ’ and ‘ better ’ are apt to be palliatives , not cures .
27 The failure of successive governments to deal with these causes must be seen as a fundamental one .
28 ‘ Shock ’ and ‘ trauma ’ must be seen as an example of what psychologists call reification : sets of concrete interpersonal and societal relationships are turned into an abstract ‘ thing ’ which dominates our language and hence our way of thinking .
29 Similarly , approaches which seem to imply a pre-knowledge of the aims and goals of other people 's lives , and lack the willingness to retain an open mind , to live with uncertainties , possibilities and transitions — these too must be seen as professional approaches with little to recommend them .
30 This must be seen as a specialist task , on a par with other administrative duties and research commitments .
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