Example sentences of "[Wh det] she [verb] as the " in BNC.

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1 There was a blue sky this morning and a dripping sound , which she located as the sound of melting snow , pattering from the eaves .
2 1 A term used by Mary Finocchiaro , which she defines as the natural out growth of a lesson .
3 Voluptuous yet vulnerable , she was put through the studio 's star-grooming routine from which she emerged as the screen phenomenon known to the world as Marilyn Monroe .
4 During the case of the nine children who were taken into care in February 1991 , one long-standing member of the Panel resigned because of what she saw as the deterioration in the Children 's Panel Hearing system in Orkney since the suspension of Mrs Kemp .
5 I am so jealous and protective of her , ’ but , close as she was to Louise , she could n't bring herself to admit what she saw as the black depths of her failure with her daughter .
6 It was what she saw as the excessive time and attention given to the ‘ South Bank ’ theologians which she objected to most strongly , feeling that it would only be a matter of time before the Governors took action to alter the position .
7 A physiotherapist talked , for instance , of what she saw as the consequences of a young person complying or not with recommended regimes :
8 Another outlined what she saw as the consequences :
9 Indeed , Eleanor Rathbone condemned what she viewed as the selfishness of middle class women who , having got ‘ all they wanted for themselves out of the women 's movement when it gave them the vote , the right to stand for Parliament and the local authorities , and to enter the learned professions ’ , then sat back .
10 Evert is not feeling comfortable with what she describes as the ‘ finality ’ of the decision , although she does agree with it in principle .
11 In this respect it is interesting to note a comment made by Andreasen on what she interprets as the relative failure of the Ellis survey to demonstrate very significant evidence of psychosis ( or the tendency to it ) among the eminent persons he surveyed .
12 In highlighting what she sees as the essence of the characters , Ms Meckler often misses their comic contradictions and ambiguities .
13 Even Baumrind ( 1982 ) , supporting Gilligan 's different voice hypothesis against what she sees as the traditionalism of the psychology of androgyny , holds on to the traditional framework of Jungian psychology in order to do this , and later ( 1986 ) , reinterprets the hypothesis in a humanist and spiritual framework , which is not differentiated by gender .
14 Whilst she frequently attacks Marxism and Communism , it is not simple political opposition , but rather an attack on what she sees as the effects of the spread of Marxism for Christianity , for ‘ it is of no mean significance that the secular/humanist/Marxist philosophy makes the destruction of Christianity one of its main priorities .
15 She is impatient with politics , and with what she sees as the marginalism of the Greens .
16 She is quite bitter about what has happened , resentful at what she sees as the inconsistent attitudes towards pregnancy and teenage motherhood held by members of her family and other West Indian people and still upset at her father 's extreme change in attitude towards her when he found out she was not his daughter .
17 Her job is to push Cabinet ministers ‘ to do what is right ’ ; this involves reminding them of the Government 's strategy laid down in the manifestos and combating what she regards as the inertia inherent in departments .
18 Beatrice was anxious not to follow what she regarded as the purposeless social round of the society wife and felt that the ‘ governing and guiding ’ work performed by women philanthropists was much less likely to ‘ unsex ’ women than academic work or the ‘ push and severity ’ demanded of a professional woman such as the hospital matron .
19 She felt he would be most useful on what she described as the ‘ solid ’ material , balancing her more ‘ fanciful ’ approach .
20 What she explains as the free manner of speech of West Coast Canadians , which would probably go down quite well in the United States , has raised Canadian eyebrows .
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