Example sentences of "a [noun] [adv] far " in BNC.

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1 I saw myself as a write-off as far as boyfriends were concerned .
2 Today threatened to be a write-off as far as work was concerned , but perhaps she could recoup some of the lost time later on .
3 Furthermore , the pleiotropic expression pattern of SSRP1 ( 11 ) and T160 ( 22 ) may imply a more general function for these proteins , a function thus far unknown .
4 Trainer Toby Balding blamed Richard Guest for making too much use of Romany King and this hugely promising eight-year-old did probably start racing a bit too far from home for comfort .
5 And knowing he 'd gone a bit too far , and glad enough , now his fright and anger were fading , to have faced down Lachlan 's temper and Farquhar 's knife unharmed , Duncan Rua was satisfied to grin back , and turn aside to work the ship .
6 But when you have a solar eclipse in your sign at Christmas , things are going a bit too far .
7 I thought that might be pushing things a bit too far . ’
8 ‘ But , look , Gurder … maybe Angalo goes a bit too far , but he could be right .
9 It was an awful long walk , a bit too far for him , really .
10 The true goal is a summit to the right of the col , but the climber may begin a bit too far to the left and go up the other way .
11 Again Clare wondered if she had gone a bit too far , speaking so negatively about Gran 's novels , and being so emphatically against the trust .
12 Not only did he sponsor us , he kept referring to our escapade as ‘ canoeing ’ ; this was stretching things a bit too far .
13 We agree that most housewives are very undervalued and there should be far higher state benefits for the less well-off — particularly one-parent families — but is n't this taking things a bit too far ?
14 This is going a bit too far , he thought , as he hurried to the scene .
15 ‘ Do n't you think you 're taking this a bit too far ?
16 Some might say that sending in a college principal to validation events in order to advise on SCOTVEC policies is carrying things a bit too far .
17 They realise that their route to the Community can be opened only if their countries are practising real democracy in respect of human rights , and multi-party Parliaments — although I said to my Polish friends , ’ You can go a bit too far . ’
18 Erm but I think it 's gone a bit too far the other way this time unfortunately .
19 This could be taking fatherley pride a bit too far .
20 Actually I 've moved it a bit too far that way have I ?
21 Despite the reported remarks ‘ to scorer colleagues … it must be very difficult to give a decision so far out ’ , it is n't ; we stand at a distance from which we can see .
22 When choosing a route consider the capabilities and limitations of all your party to ensure you do n't tackle a ridge too far .
23 Even a writer as far removed from the field covered in this book as John Le Carré owes a great deal , in all but his latest work , to the blueprint detective story .
24 As a verb it means simply ‘ to copulate ’ and the Supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary traces its literary use as a verb as far back as 1503 , when the poet ( and sometime Franciscan friar ) William Dunbar included this line in one of his verses : ‘ Be his feiris he wald have fukkit ’ .
25 Whether Euric really could enforce a settlement so far away is open to question , but clearly he tried to exert influence considerably to the north-east of his own territories .
26 The constable was transferred to a division as far from home as possible .
27 Grabbing her case , she marched along the passage to find a bedroom as far away from Guy Sterne 's as possible , and pushed inside it , shutting the door and leaning weakly back against it , suddenly aware of how much she was trembling .
28 ‘ I ca n't remember a horse so far ahead in the Grand National at this stage ! ’ enthused commentator Julian Wilson on BBC television as Crisp came to Becher 's Brook for the second time , still looking uncatchable : galloping relentlessly and jumping brilliantly , he was thirty lengths clear and showed no signs of flagging .
29 At seven o'clock on a chilly Saturday evening in November , the shroud of darkness enveloping it was a kindness as far as Captain Roddy Simcox was concerned .
30 And that meant quite a effect as far as the aborigines were concerned they had lost their territory !
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