From ... point of view• From my point of view, though, it wasn't the house that was the problem but the people.• From our point of view, this case was very important.• From the point of view of the banker or shareholder these may seem to be not unreasonable or even undesirablelimitations.• From this point of view the professional-managerial class are likely to try to maintain their position by forming themselves into professions.• Incidentally this also happens to be the most difficult part of the instrument's compassfrom the point of view of fingering.• The worst of it, from the point of view of the young people themselves, was that they acted without dignity.• In any event, the welfarepayment, from the point of view of the poor, is anything but negligibly small.• We were interested in seeing if this increase was significantfrom the point of view of higher-level processes.
from somebody’s point of view• Few studies have attempted to study the issues from the point of view of the historian.• All this time Bob Southwell had been appraising the place from the point of view of the missing person enquiry.• There has been a misunderstanding of the Government's plans from the point of view of social security benefits.• It is told from the point of view of four boys who become obsessed with five beautiful sisters.• You can't love some one without imaginativesympathy, without beginning to see the world from another point of view.• It is written from the point of view of zoologists although it is biochemical in content.• Better yet, from the point of view of headquarters, was intelligencerevealing the generalwhereabouts of an enemyunit.