Example sentences of "[is] [art] [adj] thing as a " in BNC.

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1 Well it 's the same thing as a travel agent
2 We may , following Hirsch , accept that there is no such thing as a poetic or aesthetic essence ; but we can say that such texts are rewarding when approached in aesthetic terms , or , in Lewis 's words , are read in literary ways .
3 For the five contracts dealt with in this article , there is no such thing as a ‘ standard ’ agreement .
4 As with recording advances , there is no such thing as a typical figure , but for a non-performing writer , enough money to live on should be sought .
5 Above all , remember that there is no such thing as a safe bet .
6 If any among the new reality seekers had a slightly tougher memory , they would recall that there is no such thing as a happy family .
7 The problem for the US troops , as in the bombing attacks aimed at Colonel Gadafy 's Libyan regime , is that there is no such thing as a surgical military strike against targets surrounded by civilians , many of them in this case US citizens .
8 Of course there is no such thing as a forgery-proof identity card .
9 In examining some of the questions posed , we have to accept that within the UK , and for that matter in most of the rest of the world , there is no such thing as a natural environment .
10 To me there is no such thing as a holy relic or place .
11 ‘ There is no such thing as a bloodless insurrection . ’
12 Lashley finally concluded that there is no such thing as a localised engram .
13 ‘ Nowadays , there is no such thing as a bad job .
14 There is no such thing as a bargain either .
15 And manager Graham confessed : ‘ In football , there is no such thing as a job for life .
16 That may be a ‘ price worth paying ’ to relieve recession , but if economics tells us anything it is that there is no such thing as a free lunch .
17 There is no such thing as a worthless book , though there are some far worse than worthless ; no book which is not worth preserving , if its existence may be tolerated ; as there are some men whom it may be proper to hang , but none who should be suffered to starve .
18 In a way , mentally , there is no such thing as a ‘ natural ’ driver .
19 Less comforting , though , is the realization that this concept implies that there is no such thing as a fixed reality — which is exactly what we observe on the subatomic scale .
20 But in spite of what is often claimed , there is no such thing as a dead marriage .
21 Another designer , this time a man , told me there is no such thing as a really new design , only a bit taken from here and something else added from there .
22 They argue that if the Greeks can demonstrate with exhibitions such as this that there is no such thing as a Macedonian culture in the former Yugoslavia , Serbian claims to cultural domination of the region are strengthened and Macedonia is more likely to suffer the kind of atrocities that Croatia and Bosnia have endured .
23 In isolation , there is no such thing as a price that is ‘ too high ’ .
24 If history is a process , Althusser remarks , ‘ there is no such thing as a process except in relations [ sous des rapports ] ’ .
25 Looked at this way , there is no such thing as a special kind of behaviour called ‘ political ’ ; there is only a political dimension to behaviour … ’
26 ‘ In fact ’ , Julia utters , ‘ there is no such thing as a green product ’ .
27 There is festering resentment in dark green quarters over what is seen as Julia 's reluctance to state baldly that there is no such thing as a green product , or that continued consumption at the present rate can only lead to us all dying in some particularly horrible way .
28 Whereas Ollie happens to have spotted that nowadays there is no such thing as a short-cut in London : all the back roads are dogged up by master cartologists such as Stu , petrol-pinching aficionados of kink and gully who spin their Oldsmobile Mantras into canny U-turns like instructors on the skid-rink .
29 Truly , there is no such thing as a ‘ free lunch ’ , every decision has its own inherent problems .
30 The second approach is based on the notion that there is no such thing as a grammatical/ungrammatical distinction , but instead a gradient of probability whereby certain combinations are more grammatically acceptable than others [ Sampson , 1987 ] .
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