Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] as a [noun sg] be " in BNC.

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1 Though , had she thought she might get out of his car and leave him without so much as a word being said between them , she found she was mistaken .
2 The ducks gazed thoughtfully at the sky and flapped their wings , but not so much as a peep was uttered by any of them .
3 The little history of the period that has survived is an invaluable asset , but there are great dangers in using archaeological data to elucidate chronologically-based historical problems when the span of as little as a generation is so crucial .
4 I did n't mind using the gears to achieve this , because clutch and gear change are as slick as a car 's — ladies take note .
5 Edward Cuff from Yeovil sent a most interesting collection of photographs as diverse as a Bleriot-type being flown by Gustav Hamel near Canterbury , and a selection of pictures related to the Battle of Britain airfield at Warmwell whose correct name was Woodsford .
6 A knight broke through on his way to a local joust or tournament , his steel codpiece carved as large as a bull 's whilst the helmet which swung from his saddle bow was fashioned in the macabre mask of a hangman .
7 He was black and gleaming , his outline as smooth as a dolphin 's even down to the hint of rubber .
8 There she sat , in her familiar party outfit , an eccentric , much-worn , embroidered Chinese garment , her neat , solidly cut , smartly sloping black hair as tidy as a doll 's , looking perhaps faintly Chinese rather than Jewish , diminutive as she was , and with those high cheek-bones : and there sat Alix , also by Charles 's standards impoverished , though not by her own , which were more austere .
9 She changed into her shorts — Fen had donned his before they went shopping — and , remembering Fen 's earlier insinuations , she opted for a baggy T-shirt which , she hoped , made her figure as sexless as a boy 's , then went aloft , tense , wary , uncertain of her reception .
10 The ground was broken by rifts and pits of naked , black peat , where water lay and sharp , white stones , some as big as a pigeon 's , some as a rabbit 's skull , glimmered in the moonlight .
11 Gran said , ‘ She had a lovely face , and hair as fair as a baby 's , long enough to sit on .
12 His eyes were as golden as a hawk 's , but so still and intent they awed her faintly .
13 This metaphor is developed in the second last line to describe the voice of the tramp as ‘ as sweet as a bird 's … ’ .
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