Similar words: in point of, point out, interview, point, point to, appoint, to the point, checkpoint. Meaning: n. 1. a mental position from which things are viewed 2. the spatial property of the position from which something is observed.
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151. Simply by getting out of the corporate zoo, your point of view changes.
152. Flaubert's narrator enters Emma Bovary's consciousness from time to time, to describe events from her point of view.
153. Although these turned out to be insubstantial, for a while they created concern from a security point of view.
154. The figures in the table above seem to confirm this point of view.
155. A trip to the island can be either very relaxing or very boring, depending on your point of view.
156. They influence the outcome of discussions and persuade others of their point of view more than women do.
157. Still, it's a good thing from the hunt's point of view that new blood is coming along, surely?
158. From the point of view of the banker or shareholder these may seem to be not unreasonable or even undesirable limitations.
159. Clearly everything depends upon the point of view that is adopted, and upon rival interpretations of the same events.
160. Stuart was leaning over backwards to see Oliver's point of view.
161. From our point of view, this case was very important.
162. She struggled to analyze whether this was a naive point of view; or worthless cynicism.
162. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
163. From an ecological point of view, overpopulation is a disaster no matter where it occurs or spills over.
164. He is a devil from the conservative point of view.
165. This was not yet a universally accepted point of view.
166. From the actor's point of view, the great majority of gift-giving transactions are partial repayments of debt.
167. All this time Bob Southwell had been appraising the place from the point of view of the missing person enquiry.
168. Again we can appreciate the importance of trying to see the task from the child's point of view.
169. He begins by flattering Brutus, in efforts to manipulate him into seeing his point of view.
170. In Chapters 5-8 I address myself to the topic of experiences from a phenomenological point of view.
171. Even the business schools are coming around to that point of view.
172. For one, Chilcott had kept his temper, hoping to coax his niece round to his point of view.
173. From a financial point of view, the insurance has turned a disaster into an inconvenience.
174. From a military point of view, the strategic importance of the Iberian Peninsula was evident simply from looking at a map.
175. Few studies have attempted to study the issues from the point of view of the historian.
176. From this point of view, the resulting surveys are sometimes like historical studies.
177. Our first step is to obtain information about the hens' own point of view.
178. From an accounting point of view, dividend payment is a two-step process.
179. Textermination examines the fictionality of the novel from the point of view of the reading process.
180. It guaranteed prices which were, from a retail point of view, very reasonable indeed.
More similar words: in point of, point out, interview, point, point to, appoint, to the point, checkpoint, appointment, pointillism, go into, a case in point, in the event of, get into the habit of, view, viewer, review, in view of, judicial review, joint, in front of, into, on account of, get into, fall into, in touch, come into, cut into, run into, fit into.