Example sentences of "[adv] like a " in BNC.

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1 If one looks at that erm built area where we are now that looks perhaps like a heron on a perch , and looks immediately east of that , you have Strensall Common , most of which is a restricted area .
2 seen like a border in perhaps like a bit of pink and bit of grey on it and it 's like sort of scalloped edging
3 So what did John look like perhaps like a little Billy Bunter did n't he ?
4 Her decision was made on ‘ kinda like a mass exodus trip ’ from New York with her natural father , Amhadu Jah ( a Sierra Leonese percussionist who lives in Stockholm ) , and his family , to West Africa .
5 You know , kinda like a bigger version of me … ’ ) and what happens when you pull out but the condom stays in .
6 I charged in like a bull .
7 But I was determined not to allow myself to be hauled in like a helpless fish as he reeled in his capable line .
8 Then the Birmingham Small Arms Company revealed after many a summer that the car she sat in like a burnished throne , and even some of the furs she wore , were not provided by her Prince Charming , Sir Bernard , but by them , the nuts and bolts firm of which he was chairman , as a business expense which they were no longer happy to provide .
9 The infamous Clause 28 , forbidding teachers to ‘ promote ’ homosexuality , tends to be supported by those who believe there is such a thing as classical sex — one proper , heterosexual way of doing it , which should be drummed in like a correct French accent .
10 On The Woman I Am , Chaka takes control again and , while the arrangements struggle to fill every available space with drum patterns and horn fills , she keeps swooping in like a dive-bombing seagull and forcing songs and producers into submission .
11 That is nipples which are turned in like a crater , or which do not stick up by at least half a centimetre when gently pinched between thumb and forefinger from just beyond the base .
12 Madge Allsop had just crept in like a beige dormouse and deposited a salver of tea , though Dame Edna had dismissed her with a beady look when she attempted to sit in our chat .
13 Surely one did not spend one 's time locked in like a criminal .
14 Some said his wife did n't turn a hair any more when Sammy was carried in like a drowned rat .
15 He walked in like a culprit .
16 ‘ I did n't know you could read , Jess , ’ Miss Phoebe said , coming in like a whisper .
17 March comes in like a lion
18 ‘ I just go in like a bull at a gate and most of the time it works .
19 He 's in like a breeze .
20 Her words went in like a knife .
21 At least have some wine , to put the colour back in your face ; you came in like a ghost .
22 ITN reporter Nicholson said : ‘ We want her to settle in like a normal British schoolgirl . ’
23 Mike Power and Clive Thornton pointed him in the right direction and sent him in like a terrier down a rabbit hole .
24 ‘ When the sea gets to the base of that , the tide 's already too high , and it comes in like a horse trotting , as they say .
25 ‘ The tide , ’ he had said , ‘ comes in like a horse trotting . ’
26 If he lands on a tree or on the ground he sticks in like a dart , and even if he survives the impact he wo n't be able to free himself easily .
27 Then the head falls in like a pumpkin .
28 Whatever the colour scheme , whatever the style , these pretty white duvet covers and pillowcases from Lace Lady will fit in like a dream — and make for a good night 's sleep .
29 Mostly the waiter would go along with this , sensing that Oliver was one of those customers who did not , for all their enquiries , actually want any advice , and it was just a question of slowly reeling him in like a fish .
30 Keep a baby in like a warm baby-gro
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