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81 Sentences With "thinks of as"

How to use thinks of as in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "thinks of as" and check conjugation/comparative form for "thinks of as". Mastering all the usages of "thinks of as" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It was definitely what our new president thinks of as inclusive.
Koahou's actions were more along the lines of what Capps thinks of as heroic, he said.
He's not exactly the fly-by-night-type one thinks of as a likely pill-mill operator.
" With this doctor, he develops a secret scheme, a trick that he thinks of as "his No, his great Negation.
And the Senate, who everyone thinks of as a political body is going to be playing a weird role in that.
But at least we know now that it doesn't involve any romantic feelings for Jo, whom Link thinks of as a sister.
Guay's process is a mixture of planning and a meditative, rhythmic labor that he thinks of as the antithesis of mass production.
Or look to 2010's Black Swan, which film critic Ira Madison thinks of as one of the worst queer movies out there.
And even if she was, Clara's description of her and Jack's sexual encounter didn't sound like what she thinks of as sexual assault.
He is increasingly revolted by what he thinks of as the democratization of culture, but he refuses to think of himself as undemocratic.
" There are a few different filming rooms, including one with a brick wall that the staff thinks of as its "New York stage.
Slowly, progress comes — though that usually means, at first anyway, that you're only seen at what society thinks of as your best, or your safest.
"It just makes me feel like being 15," he says of listening to the album, which he thinks of as the band's greatest hits compilation.
In both cases, those numbers are twice what they were in 1994 -- which no one thinks of as a golden age of bipartisanship and understanding.
" The casting couch and the "six-month-option girls" emerged in the period that Stephens thinks of as a time of "personal restraint and gentlemanly behavior.
Less has, for years, travelled with a set of rubber bands that he thinks of as his portable gym—multicolored, with a set of interchangeable handles.
The two have been married for just over two years and have formed a family with Maddy, whom Watson has said he thinks of as his own.
Napolitano has long advised her writing students to pay attention to ideas that stick, seemingly at random, on what she thinks of as their invisible magnet boards.
Ms. Lopez grew up near his family's farm nearby, Mr. Carigliano said, and his restaurant would be ideal for the woman he still thinks of as a neighbor.
The report also found some "substantial evidence" that more pot use can lead to problematic marijuana use — what one typically thinks of as excessive use or even dependence.
He hasn't changed his mind, clearly, since he dodges even the most straightforward question: Instead, he just wants what he thinks of as a "distracting" issue to go away.
This tribal mentality is tearing the civic fabric and creates a war of what Goldberg thinks of as "ecstatic schadenfreude" — the exaltation people feel when tribal foes are brought down.
Without his handler, Buck panics at the microphone and begins to tell what he thinks of as surefire jokes: One is racist; another (in Key West, mind) is jaw-droppingly homophobic.
He pelts Josie and her kids with one Nathanael West-like mishap after another on their meandering odyssey through the Alaska backcountry — what Josie thinks of as the "barbarian heart" of America.
The ending of the movie, the same as all the previous versions, is still a tragedy, and it's also still a man doing what he thinks of as saving a woman from herself.
And he even remains bullish on WeWork, a startup that a person close to the deal says he still thinks of as a long-term investment that can weather some short-term turbulence.
Darryl Brown, a University of Virginia law professor who has studied prosecutors' practices, sees a ''slow but steady march'' toward greater disclosure, but also resistance rooted in what he thinks of as ''status quo bias.
Gordon took sine wave patterns and turned them into the diesel-choked riffs we all know and love by running them through a massive array of effects that he thinks of as an instrument on its own.
This is all about getting to the person who has the power to change your bill — the "right person" that Null, the patient advocate, thinks of as the second key thing you need to be successful in your negotiations.
It was only on his return to America, in the mid-thirties, and in his work of the early forties that what one thinks of as Calder's greatest contribution to the language of modern form emerges: the Calder mobiles.
Some critics speak highly of the element that Thorne thinks of as key to the adaptation (the cast, especially Ruth Wilson), but they also tend to think that the storytelling isn't quite there: that it's fine, but not great.
While Swecker conceded that this precedent could open up the "floodgates" to additional requests from the government, there is a significant difference between what the general public thinks of as hacking into Apple versus creating an override of 10 passwords.
Everybody gets a fair shake next week, and the Democrats who do well will be elevated to a whole new level on the Trump enemies list, assigned a dumb nickname and attacked in the rants our president thinks of as speeches.
While quilts have been documented around the world, including in China, Egypt and Europe, the form blossomed in America as the cotton industry exploded in the mid-1800s (a period that Ms. Peck thinks of as the "heyday" of quilting).
What history usually thinks of as "the sixties" (beginning around 1964 with the Civil Rights Act and the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution) coincided, in the United States, with the coming-of-age of the baby boomers, roughly 75 million strong.
Any linear narrative film, for instance, can serve as the armature for what we would think of as a virtual reality, but which Johnny X, eight-year-old end-point consumer, up the line, thinks of as how he looks at stuff.
"Queer style is really broad and diverse, and whenever it challenges what the mainstream thinks of as androgyny devoid of any femininity, people are very freaked out by that," says Anita Dolce Vita, creative director of queer style publications dapperQ and Hi, Femme!
Of course, another possibility is that Christie doesn't really know what he's doing, that he just likes being around men he thinks of as powerful and important, and that Donald Trump is just filling the Bruce Springsteen-shaped hole in his heart.
But here's the real problem: James uses truly pro equipment that nobody is trying to sell to consumers; what he thinks of as accurate, what might technically be accurate, is not what the majority of us see on most of the devices we use.
Mongan admits that there was a period of time, during the first viral bloom of the ODH moment, when he was angry and jealous about seeing an idea that he thinks of as his, and more broadly that of his fan crew, spreading so far and so heedlessly.
"If you put more emphasis on things that relate to organic produce or new farmers or renewable energy on farms, then there might be more public support for a bill that otherwise, in broad strokes, the general public thinks of as having big subsidies for big farms," Hoefner told Fox News.
So when she first got the script for Killing Eve, Vanity Fair reports, she thought for sure that she would be auditioning for what Hollywood thinks of as a traditional "Asian role" — a doctor, or a receptionist — before being shocked to discover that she was being considered for the lead.
When Rose arrives for training at what she thinks of as assassin school, she frames her surroundings in terms of films she's seen: Will she find herself under the tutelage of a goofy but ultimately wise teacher, as in "The Karate Kid," or will she butt heads with her bunkmates, à la "The Parent Trap"?
Read: JD Twitch's So Low is a creeping, crawling, late night masterpiece Born out of a sporadically thrown party in Glasgow, So Low sees McIvor connect the dots between Chris & Cosey and Conrad Schnitzler, expertly weaving together sixteen track's worth of dark and stark synth-heavy analogue workouts that exist in a generic no man's land that he thinks of as, "head-fuck" music.
Phillip "Chance" Chancellor is the son of the wealthy heir to Chancellor Industries, Phillip Chancellor III and Nina Webster. After his father's apparent death, his mother marries Ryan McNeil, whom Phillip thinks of as a father. He is upset when Ryan leaves Nina to be with Tricia Dennison; meanwhile, Ryan is caught between the woman he loves and the boy whom he thinks of as his son. Nina eventually convinces Phillip to spend time with his stepfather and Tricia in order to get to know her.
Play is broken down into two broad categories, physical and mental. Physical play is better known and consists of the typical activities the average person thinks of as BDSM. As the BDSM scene matures and gains greater mainstream tolerance, mental play is becoming an increasingly noteworthy part of the community.
But those colleagues can be in the pay of drug companies – often > undisclosed – and the journals are too. And so are the patient groups. And > finally, academic papers, which everyone thinks of as objective, are often > covertly planned and written by people who work directly for the companies, > without disclosure.Bad Pharma, p. xi.
Kim's daughter Whitney Laine Scott, whom Eminem thinks of as his own daughter, is also portrayed by an actress towards the end of the video. She is the younger girl on the swing, at the moment in the lyrics when he says, "Hailie just smiles and winks at her little sister".Eminem – When I'm Gone. YouTube (June 16, 2009).
According to Sheeran, the hue of his lady's eyes are as blue as the seas in Tenerife, "seriously blue, like electric blue". The lyrics speak of Sheeran's girlfriend at the time, "Beth", who he thinks of as "really pretty" in her dress. Despite rumours, the song is not actually related to fellow singer-songwriter Taylor Swift.
Only Sprog, the little merlin who Patrick thinks of as a joke, is left. The other major event of the summer is the Colebridge Festival. Nicola comes second in the singing competition, despite stopping in the middle of her song because it reminds her of Jael. Her twin Lawrie is sent out of the elocution competition for unconsciously mimicking another contestant.
The Latin text of Luke 1:5–8 in Codex Gigas (13th century). Luke begins to show what he thinks of as the fulfillment of God's promises. He gives us a description of John the Baptist's parents, Zechariah, a priest of the Abijah priestly division, and Elizabeth, a descendant of Aaron. They are both getting old and have no children.
After Conan defends Qjara's gates from a nomad attack, he becomes an honorary citizen and uses the opportunity to challenge Zaius to ritual combat. Zaius accepts. Meanwhile, King Anaximander begins a diplomatic mission to Qjara. He witnesses proof of what he thinks of as Qjara's debauchery and asks the king and queen for permission to set up a temple to Voltantha in the city.
Fudge is sometimes reluctant to get into what he thinks of as scary or embarrassing situations, but he is usually a good sport once participating. He is a bit fussy with his ears, and a source of his reluctance to participate in things. He owns a van called the Zanimo Wagon that he also lives in. He has been friends with Gofrette since they were a puppy and a kitten.
London: Allen and Unwin, p. vi. Llewellyn, as a firm anti-positivist against Kelsen stated, "I see Kelsen's work as utterly sterile, save in by-products that derive from his taking his shrewd eyes, for a moment, off what he thinks of as 'pure law.'"Llewellyn, p. 356 In his democracy essay of 1955, Kelsen took up the defense of representative democracy made by Joseph Schumpeter in Schumpeter's book on democracy and capitalism.
Confronting the man he thinks of as Alec Checkerfield, he is astonished to be attacked by the Nicholas personality. Knocking Alec out, he interrogates him when he revives, but finds himself dealing with Edward. At that point Mendoza erupts from the cabin of the ship, and the Captain defeats the jamming and activates the ship's defenses. Mendoza does not recognize Joseph, who realizes that whatever he thinks, Alec, Edward and Nicholas genuinely love her.
Smith's novel comments on the development of the genre during the 18th century. For example, usually the heroine marries the first man she thinks of as a possible husband in the novel, but this is not the case in Emmeline. Emmeline marries Godolphin, a character who does not appear until half-way through the narrative. Some readers felt that this was dangerous, since it suggested that the ideal woman would have a romantic past.
There are three major religious sects in the Swords universe. Although many privately worship their own gods or goddesses, three institutions that can be found no matter where one goes. The White Temple is ordered around the worship of ARDNEH and values love and respect for life. Many of the leading healing centers and hospitals are actually White Temples, and most of what one thinks of as traditional "holy men" are servants of White.
The film tackles difficulties of contemporary teenagers. A young teen loses her innocence in a rapid spiral of events, with disturbing portrayals of drug use, sex, theft, and dropping out of school. Reed and Hardwicke wrote the script from the point of view of Tracy, a "normal" 13-year-old who begins at a new middle school. There she meets Evie, who she thinks of as more advanced and whom she wants to impress.
One day, Emily is killed by a drunk driver, devastating Mitchell and his family. Following his daughter's death, Mitchell reads about fatherhood in the Bible. He decides he must be a better father and crafts a detailed "Resolution" to honor God in every aspect of his family. Mitchell, Hayes, Fuller, Thomson, and Martinez join him in his resolution at a formal ceremony conducted by Hayes's neighborhood mentor, the man he thinks of as a father.
Gabe Wallach is a graduate student in literature at the University of Iowa and an ardent admirer of Henry James. Fearing that the intellectual demands of a life in literature might leave him cloistered, Gabe seeks solace in what he thinks of as "the world of feeling". Following the death of his mother at the opening of the novel, Gabe befriends his fellow graduate student Paul Herz. The novel Letting Go is divided into seven (7) sections: 1\.
Bell, however, dismisses the idea of marrying Bernard whom she thinks of as a brother. When Mrs. Dale and her daughters feel Christopher is pressuring Bell to marry Bernard, they announce they will be leaving the Small House so they are no longer beholden to him. In the end, the squire convinces them to stay and he gives both girls a sum of money for them to enjoy regardless of whom they marry or if they marry at all.
When he returns he manages to convince her to meet him for dinner. They initially go to the Bistro, but later bond over a hotpot in the Rovers Return. An Inside Soap writer commented "As Lloyd reassures Jenna he's not out to replace the man she thinks of as her father, things begin to look up..." Jenna is first seen when her mother, Mandy, starts meeting up with Lloyd Mullaney again. Lloyd begins to suspect that Jenna may be his daughter when he discovers her age.
At a party he hesitates between two women as potential sexual partners, opts for Marion, spends the night with her and the next day goes shopping in the city. He again encounters the woman he drove to Marseille, whom he thinks of as "Mercedes" because he does not know her name, in an elevator at a shopping mall. At the same time a powerful earthquake devastates Marseille. Meyer manages to get out of the elevator and pulls "Mercedes" by the wrist; fleeing the proximity of the sea, they go back to the Saint-Barnabé district.
A somewhat spoilt and self-reliant girl, Rachel is in love with her cousin Frankin Blake. P. D. James saw her as one of the examples of Collins' rare (Victorian) ability to depict women capable of real desire:P. D. James, Introduction, Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone (Oxford 1999) p. 10 With her temper, insistence on making her own decisions, and readiness to grapple with the social implications of her passion for a man she thinks of as a thief, Rachel has been seen as a prototype of the New Woman, as anticipated in the sensation novel.
The Sultan escapes with his wife and child. After a pitched battle involving magic carpets, storms and ships, the Sultan is missing, Malika is blinded, and the young Shehzada is washed ashore by a dolphin (whom he eventually thinks of as his mother) to a blacksmith. This blacksmith adopts the kid, trains him in all the worldly and martial arts, and thus creates Ajooba. In the meantime, the Vazir blames Ameer Baba for the Sultan's murder, takes over the throne, and begins ravaging the land, always uttering his slogan Shaitan Zindabaad (Long live the Devil).
Canto 4 offers details on Shade's daily life and creative process, as well as thoughts on his poetry, which he finds to be a means of somehow understanding the universe. In Kinbote's editorial contributions he tells three stories intermixed with each other. One is his own story, notably including what he thinks of as his friendship with Shade. After Shade was murdered, Kinbote acquired the manuscript, including some variants, and has taken it upon himself to oversee the poem's publication, telling readers that it lacks only line 1000.
Either way, it denies one or the other of the positions Searle thinks of as "strong AI", proving his argument. The brain arguments in particular deny strong AI if they assume that there is no simpler way to describe the mind than to create a program that is just as mysterious as the brain was. He writes "I thought the whole idea of strong AI was that we don't need to know how the brain works to know how the mind works." If computation does not provide an explanation of the human mind, then strong AI has failed, according to Searle.
She wrote, illustrated and designed A Child's Machiavelli, published by Abbeville, Penguin and Nautilus, and Dr. Faustie's Guide to Real Estate Development, published by Nautilus. Hart then studied animation at New York University Center for Advanced Digital Applications with the intention of animating her illustrated books. Instead, she developed a body of work consisting of 3D-animated installations that she thinks of as temporal paintings. Her contemporary art consists of designs for sublime landscape gardens often containing expressive and sensual female bodies meant to interject emotional subjectivity into what is typically the overly-determined Cartesian world of digital design.
As in Voice of the Crowd and Brother Nap, fact and fiction are mixed so it is not easy to know where one ends and the other begins, as real historical figures like Crompton interact with fictitious ones like Seth. A strong woman is important here also, in this case the wife of Seth, who functions as the voice of conscience, for instance, on the matter of child labour. In Mutiny, the book he was working on on the day he died, Tilsley explores what he thinks of as the first modern strike by workers, the beginnings of modern unionism.
Jones comes to understand what has happened to him: sometime in the future, computers, originally designed to help humans with warfare, are given the power of command. They become all-powerful and all-controlling and lose sight of their original purpose. One of the two computers, "Dulcie", which Jones thinks of as a female, finds a way to simplify "her" work: > Probing into the mysteries of the human brain—so convenient and puzzling a > model of her own—she found the pattern that could fix a mind forever in one > unreasoning conviction. She chose the simplest and best for her purpose: I > love Dulcie.
In 1941 the Air Ministry began work on the plan-position indicator, or PPI, a new type of radar display that produced a 2D image of the space around the radar station. The PPI is what one normally thinks of as a radar display, with a circular face and a visible beam rotating around it. This display was being used to help ease the task of plotting an airborne interception, as both the target aircraft and the interceptor appeared on the same display, allowing the operators to easily direct the interceptor. Late in 1941, the labs at Eastney began adapting the PPI for use with the Type 271.
Chase's personal life has been an area of great speculation as he has claimed to have slept with over 1,000 women, but later denied that the number is that high. Vincent is lactose intolerant. Throughout the series, Vince talks about how he and his entourage are "living the life" after growing up with little money, at one point saying that "I came from nothing, and as much as I like the toys, I really don't need them" when told that offers for him are drying up. He is eager to share the financial and social spoils of his current stardom with them, who he thinks of as his family.
In SVU, Munch is first partnered with Brian Cassidy (Dean Winters), whom he thinks of as a kind of younger brother, alternately poking fun at him and imparting (often questionable) advice on life and women. When Cassidy leaves the precinct in 2000, Munch is briefly partnered with Monique Jeffries (Michelle Hurd), but when she too leaves the precinct he is paired with her replacement, Odafin Tutuola (Ice-T). He and Tutuola get off to a rough start, but gradually come to like and respect each other. After Munch is shot by a suspect during a trial, the dialogue he shares with Tutuola in the hospital demonstrates the regard and respect the characters have gained for one another.
Upon arrival in Tokyo, Kyoko lives an unreasonably frugal life and works multiple jobs to support Sho, as he is called by his fans, spending nothing on herself and doing whatever she can for Sho, who eventually becomes ranked seventh of the top twenty most popular male celebrities of Japan. One day, she overhears Shotaro complaining about her to his manager, saying that she is a boring and plain girl who he thinks of as a doormat. He proceeds to sweet-talk and flirt with his manager, in stark contrast to the cold and demanding attitude he usually exhibits towards Kyoko. As she storms away, Kyoko doesn't shed many tears when she learns that Sho wanted her along only to handle housekeeping duties.
Population ethical problems are particularly likely to arise when making large-scale policy-decisions, but they can also affect how we should evaluate certain choices made by individuals. Examples of practical questions that give rise to population ethical problems include the decision whether or not to have an additional child; how to allocate life-saving resources between young and old people; how many resources to dedicate to climate change mitigation; and whether or not to support family planning programs in the developing world. The decisions made about all of these cases affect the number, the identity and the average quality of life of future people. One's views regarding population ethics have the potential to significantly shape what one thinks of as the most pressing moral priorities.
In 2018, Alexander gave a TEDx talk in Denver where she discussed her research on the importance of sex education in preventing sexual assault in teens. She talked about her research exploring the backgrounds and statistics of childhood sex offenders, recounting that one third of sexual offences are committed by individuals under the age of 18. She further explored what was considered as a sex offence in the record of these young adults, and the majority of them were not what one typical thinks of as sexual offences. Unfortunately, the label of sex offender remains permanent in the lives of these children as they move into adulthood, even though less than 4% of these individuals never go on to commit another offence.
Havelock's claim was that the Republic can be used to understand the position of poetry in the "history of the Greek mind."Preface to Plato 15. The book is divided into two parts, the first an exploration of oral culture (and what Havelock thinks of as oral thought), and the second an argument for what Havelock calls "The Necessity of Platonism" (the title of Part 2): the intimate relationship between Platonic thought and the development of literacy. Instead of concentrating on the philosophical definitions of key terms, as he had in his book on Democritus, Havelock turned to the Greek language itself, arguing that the meaning of words changed after the full development of written literature to admit a self-reflective subject; even pronouns, he said, had different functions.
Mr. Talbot shakes Luke's hand as he leaves and slips him a note, which Luke hides in his pocket. Having only ever met six other people – his parents and brothers, Jen, and Mr. Talbot – in his entire life, Luke is overwhelmed by the size of Hendricks, and the hundreds of boys who are always around him. He ducks into one class after another simply to avoid the teachers and monitors who patrol the hallways, and finds that no one will tell him what classes he belongs in, or what he should be doing. He is never alone and so can't read Mr. Talbot's note, and the first night in his dorm room one of his roommates (who he thinks of as ‘jackal boy’) bullies him until well after lights-out.
These subjects include patriotism, traditional values, and love. The story begins when old Nagabonar comes to Jakarta from Medan at the request of his son, a successful young businessman who runs a large company with three of his closest friends, Pomo (Darius Sinathrya), Ronnie (Uli Herdinansyah) and Jaki (Michael Muliadro). Conflict and hilarity ensues when Bonaga tells his father the plan to sell their old palm plantation, where his mother and grandmother are buried along with his father's best friend Bujang. Nagabonar's outrage at what he thinks of as a desecration is then quickly subdued by Bonaga's consultant and love interest, Monita (Wulan Guritno), At least until Nagabonar learns that the would-be buyers of his land are Japanese, people who come from the very same country he fought against during the war of independence.
A notable expert on antisemitism, Robert Wistrich, stated "the net result of Marx's essay is to reinforce a traditional anti-Jewish stereotype – the identification of the Jews with money-making – in the sharpest possible manner".R. Wistrich in Soviet Jewish Affairs Journal, 4:1, 1974 Isaac Deutscher (1959)Isaac Deutscher: Message of the Non-Jewish Jew in American Socialist 1958 compares Marx with Elisha ben Abuyah, Baruch Spinoza, Heinrich Heine, Rosa Luxemburg, Leon Trotsky, and Sigmund Freud, all of whom he thinks of as heretics who transcend Jewry, and yet still belong to a Jewish tradition. According to Deutscher, Marx's "idea of socialism and of the classless and stateless society" expressed in the essay is as universal as Spinoza's ethics and God. Shlomo Avineri (1964), while regarding Marx's antisemitism as a well-known fact, points out that Marx's philosophical criticism of Judaism has often overshadowed his forceful support for Jewish emancipation as an immediate political goal.
Another talent (instinctively but unwillingly acquired and later eagerly demanded) is his skill at and technique of milking Minotaurs and Pans by hand (a skill that later makes him a target for the Satyr girls who also work at the farm). Almost none of the other characters call Kimihito by his actual name, except for Ms. Smith in the first chapter and Manako as of Chapter 42. The girls seem to fall in love with him simply because he is nice, friendly and modest, and because he treats the "monster" girls as ordinary, real people — not as exotic or dangerous monsters; he is so unconsciously adept at this (perhaps because it is part of his personality) that he seems to become friends with other liminals with astonishing ease. He is also not afraid to unhesitatingly put himself in physical danger to protect or save his liminal house-guests, whom he thinks of as family, as demonstrated on several occasions such as bodily shielding Centorea from a sword attack, trying to save an injured Mero or nearly being absorbed by a giant-sized slime liminal while trying to save Suu.

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