Example sentences of "as [v-ing] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 This manuscript , which was clearly intended for publication , reflects his personal observation as well as drawing on the published literature on the disease .
2 In suggesting that the idea of higher education is hinged on self-criticism , I am not so much developing a personal concept of higher education , therefore , as drawing to the surface our common ( though largely hidden ) understanding of higher education .
3 We shall describe such an approach as deriving from a text-as-product view .
4 This would seem very close to the ‘ bow-wow ’ theory of linguistic evolution , one of the theories much discussed in Eliot 's youth , which saw language as deriving from the imitation of natural sounds .
5 The problems discussed in this section are not necessarily separate from those outlined as deriving from the colonial model , indeed they frequently overlap .
6 But to see communicative significance as deriving from the phylogenetically arbitrary status of apine dance , as a solution to their co-ordination problem , is open to a serious objection .
7 Thus Skocpol sees the state 's autonomy as deriving from the specific political functions that it performs .
8 This was difficult to understand for impassioned artists who saw Surrealism and Abstraction as struggling for the soul of modern art .
9 This is a waste of money as well as annoying to the media concerned .
10 Moreover , Avitus of Vienne in a letter to Gundobad describes him as weeping over the deaths of his brothers .
11 So , ‘ the distinctive feature of Christian piety lies in the fact that whatever alienation from God there is in the phases of our experience , we are conscious of it as an action originating in ourselves , which we call Sin ; but whatever fellowship with God there is , we are conscious of it as resting upon a communication from the Redeemer , which we call Grace ’ .
12 he vigorously used an ancient notion of personal worth as resting in an original standard substance , and variation as introduced by society .
13 Criticism connected to choices we have made — about restaurants , films , books to read — may be interpreted as reflecting on the person who made the choice or suggestion , though this may not be the critic 's intention .
14 The governing body was concerned that setting up its own separate committee structure would not only be perceived as competing with the existing structure ( with all the attendant risks of a developing ‘ us and them ’ mentality where one rarely existed before ) , but would also be repetitive .
15 Locate in Scotland , the agency charged with luring foreign multinationals to set up in Scotland , is generally seen as competing with the Welsh Development Agency and the Irish Development Authority to secure these coveted new tenants .
16 It is viewed by some as having a prime role as a respite for carers , others additionally see their role as assisting in the more practical needs such as baths , chiropody , medication etc .
17 The Forestry Commission believe that as well as catering for a growth sport , building these new routes helps separate bikers from walkers , so helping both to enjoy the forest in peace and safety .
18 As well as catering for the spiritual needs of the Russian settlers , monks , sometimes with lay assistants , participated in the colonial process by establishing small monastic communities which soon attracted peasants and became the focus of new communities .
19 He was an official of the church himself , as well as singing in the choir .
20 But the jurist allows it to be treated as inhering in the legacy , charged on the sum of money which has now come to Maevius .
21 In the same way he never recognised himself as eating with a familiar spoon from a familiar plate .
22 The Gothic side of Wordsworth is usually played down , and he is thought of as reacting against the overstimulation of the imagination which medieval fantasy so frequently provided .
23 Thus all references to sets of conditions are to be understood as allowing for the possibility of one-member sets .
24 As well as allowing for the " artist 's licence " we need to remember that artists often had to satisfy patrons , or produce work that would sell .
25 This obviously saves much time and effort as well as allowing for the creation of more imaginatively produced work .
26 Hitler reminded his audience of his grim ‘ prophecy ’ for the first time in his Reichstag speech on 30 January 1941 , and in 1942 returned to it in no fewer than four major addresses , on 30 January , 24 February , 30 September , and 8 November , as well as hinting at the destruction of the Jews in the war in his ‘ New Year Appeal ’ .
27 Walsingham and Knighton also attempted to blame Wyclif and the Lollards for propagating revolt , but this must be seen only as scaremongering by the established order in the Church , attempting to tar the socially conservative academic heretic with the brush of revolution .
28 However , it would be quite mistaken to regard the conflict over farming and the environment as stemming from a ‘ breakdown of communications ’ , to use the fashionable cliché , because a direct conflict of interest is also involved .
29 In December 1990 Bob Haboldt gave his rationale behind choosing a large gallery as stemming from the different approach of Continental buyers , who like to stroll in and look , as opposed to clients who tend to make an appointment to visit his New York gallery in order to see a specific work .
30 The two largest parties in Britain , the Conservative and Labour parties , view Britain 's problems as stemming from the pursuit in the past of inadequate policies ( Chapter 6 ) .
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