Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] him as [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 And my real father — I mean my official , signed and sealed father — struck me the only time I met him as a grandiose old phoney .
2 Like Richter and Tatyana Nikolaieva , I seen him as the founding father of all true musical quality , a composer far removed from conventional notions of sobriety , academicism or dryness .
3 I rated him as the best British droll comedian we had .
4 I cried out in relief and happiness : I thought I recognised him as a former schoolmate , a boy with whom I used to exchange groans about the maths problems whose solutions so frequently eluded us .
5 I knew him as a hard-working , modest , and honest politician , ’ he said .
6 ‘ I could n't believe he drugged me because I saw him as a caring person , he had got me into his confidence .
7 In that too I saw him as an obvious heir to the boys of the old Paris suburbs ’ ( p. 143 ) .
8 There I had him as a charming , affectionate colleague of mature judgment .
9 In view of the fact that , like you , I regard him as a fluent liar and consummate actor , I think not .
10 I see him as a servile little bugger !
11 I thought he played well against England last week and I see him as a valuable member of our squad . ’
12 On being asked by someone else whether she saw God as male or female , she replied ‘ Neither : I see him as an absolute supreme Being ! ’ .
13 I have a feeling its not too different from how Leeds play now , that s why I see him as an excellent ( joint ? )
14 He is certainly all that , but I see him as the new Jasper Johns — that great transformer of icons — with sex , shopping and the detritus of the suburbs in place of Johns 's targets , beer cans and flags .
15 Mills Roberts was a stickler for discipline but everyone recognised him as a good soldier and therefore , for all his shouting , he was a popular figure .
16 She 's spent 6 years researching his life and she 's now written a book which describes him as a talented , but essentially ordinary man .
17 Chung ran a campaign — widely compared with that of Ross Perot in the US elections — which portrayed him as a political " outsider " with direct economic experience gleaned as the head of a giant commercial concern .
18 The motives of public men are rarely as base or as quixotic as their enemies would have us believe ; and no portrait of MacDonald is complete which depicts him as the ambitious , fawning courtier of Labour mythology or the martyred patriot of his own invention .
19 It was the Physics which led him to Engineering , and the Engineering which took him as a National Serviceman to Germany and the experimental air fields .
20 He was a good artist , and he was certainly a competent amateur astronomer , sending several observations of comets and of the planet Uranus to the Gentleman 's Magazine and to the American Philosophical Society , which enrolled him as a foreign member in 1787 .
21 Commander Leonard Burt , who was to be the recipient of Joyce 's confessions many years later , noted this sense of grievance which characterised him as a young man :
22 She failed him as a great ‘ silver ’ power , as a naval power at Trafalgar , and by 1807 her domestic polities were so confused by court intrigue that she appeared scarcely a reliable political ally .
23 Rose 's pupil , who succeeded him as the royal gardener .
24 Ramos , a Protestant , was criticized on Feb. 18 by the influential ( Catholic ) Archbishop of Manila , Cardinal Jaime Sin , who attacked him as a former Marcos stooge and expressed his preference for Mitra , thus denting Ramos ' dwindling support within the LDP .
25 Fergus felt a surge of real anger now , because how dare she treat him as an inferior , how dare she speak to him as if he was no more than one of her serfs , a possession , a pawn , a thing .
26 His dedication brought him swift advancement at the cost of alienating his contemporaries , who regarded him as an arrogant , stand-offish prig .
27 Those who dismissed him as a third-rate actor failed to recognize his ability as a political campaigner .
28 She recognised him as a kindred spirit , with the same happy-go-lucky , questing attitude to life which she herself possessed .
29 Despite her antagonism , she recognised him as an awesome adversary .
30 ‘ Or do you see him as an inconvenient remnant of outmoded superstition — a bit like a gallstone — of which we must all be purged before religion can take on its true form , that is , without him . ’
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