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43 Sentences With "saw it through"

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

Mr. Sondland explained that Mr. Trump saw it through a transactional lens.
I began to look at it differently, I saw it through Scandinavian eyes.
If I started a company, I saw it through the hard times and kept at it.
Whatever it was, it's their story, and they had to go through it, and they saw it through.
But there was a patient before him, so he steeled himself and saw it through, and the patient survived.
He was about to go in for another kiss when he saw it through the corner of his eye.
They were "presenting Colombia as I saw it, through my childhood, and not as many people imagine it," Shakira said.
While they stayed at the search giant and saw it through to maturity, many of their peers launched multiple startups.
I put it at the bottom because it's just not a record where I had a vision and saw it through.
A major Broadway producer — one of the few willing to take it on — quit before the creators found the ones who saw it through.
I would put this there because I was proud of it, and I saw it through, but there was a lot of difficulty making this record.
He's giving us his own condemnatory view of the war, but also the view of Americans who saw it through the filter of racism and supported it.
Greenblatt's book has two chief projects: showing that Shakespeare was consciously responding to historical events, and defining the "tyrant" as Shakespeare saw it through a very Trump-colored lens.
I had always loved school but now, having missed several years, I saw it through new eyes -- something not to be treated lightly, and certainly not to be taken for granted.
I'm not sure a new Akira game needs to stick 100% faithfully to the plot we all know, and were suitably flipped-out by the first time we saw it through.
This happened more than 400 years ago, when Galileo presented six watercolor images of the moon as he saw it through his repurposed spyglass — which we now know as a telescope.
They said they "saw it through a different lens" and that must have been frustrating too, when they're not saying the same thing as you but you are, as you said, so certain.
In reflecting on the war, it seems incredible that the French Army saw it through from beginning to end—especially considering how many countries, like Russia and the Ottoman Empire, collapsed under similar strain.
The second is that Mr Johnson sees politics through the prism of City Hall, his former base as mayor, just as Mrs May saw it through the prism of the Home Office, which she ran before Downing Street.
For example, because even the Dutch aren't sure what's legal or not, one would say You saw it through the fingers when you test the law, which translates to one pretending they didn't see that you, in fact, just did something illegal.
The departure of long-time Elon Musk confident Deepak Ahuja — who had served as CFO in Tesla's early days and saw it through an IPO, and who had returned to the CFO post in 2017 during a cash crunch — was another surprise for investors.
Prime ministers tend to see foreign policy through the prism of domestic policy: David Cameron saw it through the prism of ridding the Tories of their image as a "nasty party"; Theresa May sees it through the prism of the Home Office and the problem of controlling migration.
He saw it through its expansion into all five boroughs in 1976 (though he didn't actually run that course himself until 1992, two years before his death at 62) and helped it grow by traveling to other marathons to introduce himself to the world's best runners and signing them to race in New York.
Røa's first season in Toppserien was a fierce battle to avoid relegation. In the last match the team saw it through. The next two seasons were a dramatic improvement, the team finished fourth (out of ten) both times. In 2004 Røa won both league and cup.
Kafra could not do anything but let her heart be broken. She and her family then helped the Penduko family escape from Pantas and King Bacul. When Pedro was leaving, Kafra kissed him, and Hiyas saw it through his father's mirror. This happening made Hiyas agree to get married with Napoleon.
One phase was the construction of ships for inland waters at Ulm and Friedrichshafen, begun in 1852 and stopped by 1858, that saw it through the time of economic crisis after 1848. 50 boats for the river Danube, two steamships for the river Neckar, two steamers and two tugs for Lake Constance and were the result of this thoroughly successful venture.
Following Wilson's 1864 resignation, PRR First Vice-President George Brooke Roberts, an engineer, took over the project and saw it through to completion. (He later became president of the PRR.) Thomas Seabrook was the masonry contractor. The bridge opened to traffic on 2 June 1867. The bridge was narrow, with only 2 tracks and an iron truss at mid-river.
Lord Macclesfield was a director of the Regent's Canal from 1812 and its chairman from 1816. He was appointed as a commissioner of the Crown Estate Paving Commission in August 1824. As chair of the canal company he saw it through its most testing times as a variety of problems and obstacles had to be surmounted before the canal could be opened in 1820.
His proposers were Sir James Donaldson, John Horne, Frank W. Young and Cargill Gilston Knott. In 1914 he became Rector of the Royal High School, Edinburgh and saw it through the losses of the First World War. In 1918 he returned to his alma mater, Leeds University, as Professor of Education where he remained until 1934. He died on 7 October 1945 in Eastbourne.
Bandinel was a lifelong benefactor. He was instrumental in the construction of the Thames Tunnel (1828) through his close friendship with—and financial support of—Marc Isambard Brunel. In 1845, he provided land for the construction and endowment of a parish church at Melplash, Dorset. It had been an unfulfilled wish of his father to see the church built, and Bandinel saw it through to completion; the dedication ceremony was in 1846.
A new melting system in 1972, including the largest cupola of its kind in the world, would supply the new iron for this pipe, and American would move from a Sand Spun casting process to a generation of deLavaud metal molds, still used today. Throughout the 1960s, American would continue to diversify, adding its valves and hydrants product line and gaskets. American’s innovation, diversification and capital investments saw it through economically challenging times in the early 1980s.
During his studies, he identified some poetry of Poe originally published anonymously as well as never published manuscripts. His wife took over the project after his death and saw it through to completion. In 1967, during research for The Complete Works of Poe, Mabbott discovered a lost Walt Whitman poem titled "No Turning Back", one of only four he is known to have written in 1842. Mabbott also appreciated the horror writing of H. P. Lovecraft.
Then she and Jean Rawlingson edited and translated the Russian manuscript into English. They edited the text, and saw it through to publication. The book Early Memoirs appeared in 1981. These writings describe in detail her early years traveling in provincial Russia with her dancer parents, her brother Vaslav's development as a dancer, her schooling and first years as a professional in the Diaghilev era of Russian ballet, and her work assisting her brother in his choreography.
Priya's nephew (and Chauhan's son) pointed out Raja as the murderer of Verma. Soon, Inspector Vijay realises that his son was the main eyewitness of Verma's murder; Vijay's son saw it through the window. When Raja learns that the murder was committed in front of Priya's home and that Priya's nephew (and Chauhan's son) has suddenly become silent since the day of the murder, he realizes that Priya's nephew has seen him. Next day someone tries to murder Vijay's son, but soon Vijay comes and the killer runs away.
Broyles served as editor-in-chief of the magazine from 1980–1982, and saw it through its redesign and renaming as California. By 1982, Broyles's impressive track record in the magazine publishing world had caught the attention of Katharine Graham who recruited him to serve as editor of Newsweek magazine, replacing Lester Bernstein. He held that position from 1982 to 1984, when he resigned to pursue other interests. During the next few years, Broyles made one more foray into the magazine publishing world, serving as editor-in-chief of Cable Guide, but he focused primarily on developing his writing career.
Elgin Courier is a newspaper in Elgin, Texas. Founded by Miles Hill, the paper has been published on a weekly basis since 1890. Though it was not the first paper in Elgin -prior to 1890 there was The Meteor, The Times, and others – it has long been the paper of record for not just Elgin, but much of the surrounding communities of McDade, Coupland, and other areas in Bastrop County, along with The Bastrop Advertiser and media from the larger city of Austin. The paper was purchased by Julian O. Smith in 1901, who published it until 1948, and saw it through a period of major growth.
Michael de Lisle – a Rhodes Scholar – and his wife, Mary Beth, took over the school in July 1973, halfway through its Golden Jubilee Year, and saw it through a difficult time when numbers were declining. It was in this period that the move to spare land at St Alban's was promoted by the School Council but rejected by the Old Boys. The school community, in which the Old Boys’ Association was prominent, undertook a concerted effort to keep the school's independence. What eventually made it possible for the school to stay was the re-establishment of standards and the slight rise in numbers that was de Lisle's achievement.
Science House has a strong and special association with the Linnean Society, the Royal Society of New South Wales and the Institution of Engineers Australia as well as significant groups and persons. Firstly, with the three institutions of scientific learning and inquiry who believed strongly that a central place of learning was required. Secondly, with the architectural firm, Peddle Thorp and Walker which was responsible for the design of the building developed through a design competition and then saw it through to its completion. Peddle, Thorp and Walker grew to become one of the largest and prolific architectural practices in Australia continuing to this day.
Shortly, with the generation of a groundswell of support for the organisation at a meeting at Red Lion Square, Tony Whitehead and others joined the group and formally founded the organisation and saw it through registration as a charity to provide direct services to those affected by HIV. The trust was named after Terry to personalise and humanise the issue of AIDS. It was formalised in August 1983 when it adopted a constitution and opened a bank account, and the name of the trust was changed (Terrence rather than Terry) to sound more formal. It incorporated as a limited company in November 1983 and gained charitable status in January 1984.
Lynch wrote of his war experiences long-hand filling twenty exercise books in the late 1920s and 1930s. During his time as Commanding Officer of an Australian Jungle Training School in World War II he typed up the manuscript with the aim of having it published. There was insufficient interest at that time and other than some excerpts being published in the RSL magazine Reveille the story remained untold. The nine-centimetre-thick manuscript remained with Lynch's family and in 2002 his grandson Mike Lynch brought it to the attention of military historian Will Davies who edited it and saw it through to publication by Random House in 2006.
In 1979, Berger contributed to his first published monograph, working with Charles Nanry on the book The Jazz Text (New York: Van Nostrand, 1979). He wrote biographical sketches of a number of major jazz figures and also authored the chapter "A Student's Guide to Jazz Research." In 1982, in collaboration with Morroe Berger and James Patrick, Berger published the two volume biography and discography Benny Carter: A Life in American Music (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1982). Berger wrote portions of the biography, authored the entirety of volume two which is an annotated discography of Carter, and, after Morroe Berger's death in 1981, edited the work and saw it through publication.
The project was conceived by Henry Salomon,"Navy Plans to Present War History on Video" Chicago Tribune, 12 March 1951. who, while a U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander during World War II, was a research assistant to historian Samuel Eliot Morison. Morison was then writing the 15-volume History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. During this period, Salomon learned of the large amounts of film that the warring navies had compiled. Salomon left the Navy in 1948 and eventually discussed his idea of a documentary series with one of his Phillips Academy and Harvard classmates, Robert Sarnoff, a rising executive at NBC television and the son of David Sarnoff, the chairman of RCA (then the owner of NBC). It was Robert Sarnoff who championed Salomon’s proposal, won its approval and saw it through to completion.
Recent headmasters have included Donald Frith OBE (1959–1978), Dr J M Frost (1979–1984), and Alan Walker, an old boy and former English teacher at the school (1984–92), all of whom have since died. Dr Frost went on to become principal of the then-New York 6th Form college (now York College (York)), established in the building previously occupied by Ashfield Secondary Modern School, and opened as part of the reorganisation in 1985. The last headmaster was John Harris (1992–2010), who joined the school when it had the lowest results in York, and saw it through expansion from 439 students in 1992 to almost 900 and the best exam results in the school's history before his retirement in 2010. The current headmaster is Andrew Daly, who prior to joining the school, held a position in the senior leadership team at St Wilfrid's Catholic School and Sixth Form College in Wakefield.

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