use n as n | 220.61 | We used worms as bait. | ||
see n as n | 140.29 | He sees his age as an asset. | ||
describe n as n | 75.18 | Botsford described his client as upbeat. | ||
identify n as n | 57.87 | He identified the men as Americans. | ||
take n as n | 54.05 | He took a job as a waiter. | ||
have n as n | 50.16 | Albert had polio as a child. | ||
view n as n | 49.51 | Bristol has never viewed his work as art. | ||
be n as n | 34.89 | Both were standouts as UCLA. | ||
make n as n | 34.56 | And I make his desk as a desk. | ||
regard n as n | 31.93 | China regards Taiwan as a province. | ||
portray n as n | 31.60 | I just want to portray Jess as Jess. | ||
dismiss n as n | 28.97 | He dismissed the thought as nonsense. | ||
replace n as n | 28.83 | Gingrich replaces Cheney as whip. | ||
treat n as n | 26.40 | Does it treat slavery as a joke? | ||
give n as n | 25.54 | Give books as gifts. | ||
cite n as n | 24.88 | Laming cited IBM as an example. | ||
accept n as n | 24.42 | Gonzalez accepted the pain as routine. | ||
join n as n | 22.12 | He might join the NBA as a guard. | ||
lose n as n | 19.88 | He had lost an eye as a child. | ||
offer n as n | 18.63 | But the station offers no letters as proof. |