Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] [adj] as a [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Again , the spotlight has been on men — a reflection of the place of women in the arts as much as a marker of the unacceptability of lesbianism . |
2 | Frogs , lizards and small mammals are all hunted on the ground ; and the largest rattlesnakes , such as the diamondbacks , which may exceed 2 m ( 6l/2 ft ) in length , feed on animals as large as a hare . |
3 | With eyes as wide as a football pool , |
4 | Indeed , until acts of 1775 and 1777 introduced bottom limits of £1 and £5 respectively , some north-western manufacturers issued promissory notes to facilitate the payment of wages for denominations as low as a shilling . |
5 | This is that the policy was not an attack on the universities so much as a defence of their interests — whether or not correctly understood by officials and ministers . |
6 | Some have hearing which is so acute that they can detect insects as tiny as a midge up to 60 feet away . |
7 | Some of these guns were on the top of the submarine pens , others were on concrete towers as large as a couple of houses but far more strongly built . |
8 | The engine rooms lay astern and in the bows , beneath awnings , were wheels as tall as a man . |
9 | In the Minehead area , Gribble Booth & Taylor have properties as diverse as a fisherman 's cottage at £69,950 , a modern flat development at £79,950 and a detached bungalow at £82,500 . |
10 | It came at the end of a month that would send most managers as mad as a March hare , with a defeat at Oldham and points dropped to Villa , Manchester City and Arsenal . |
11 | The animal seemed to understand Sir John 's words for it lunged towards him with a strangled growl ; its top lip curled , showing teeth as sharp as a row of daggers . |
12 | After morning service , when the last of the footsteps , and voices exchanging greetings , had died away , she heard the vicar ride off , the clip-clop of the horse 's hooves as clear as a bell on the cold air . |
13 | Each child born in the industrialised world consumes between 20 and 40 times as much as a child living in one of the poorer countries . |
14 | For a specimen of Muscovite of this shape Orowan found that the tensile strength was about 460,000 p.s.i. , that is to say nearly twenty times as strong as a specimen in which the cracks did not have to cross the planes of weakness . |
15 | A termite fortress , walled , buttressed and castellated , may contain ten tons of mud and stand three or four times as tall as a man . |
16 | This was the archaic picture of a king ten times as large as a noble , a noble ten times as large as a merchant — and so on down to the almost imperceptible peasant woman . |
17 | This is amply illustrated by Table 11.1 , which shows the basic statistics for each station , including the 30-second average cost per thousand for 1991 , which suggests that a customer in London is judged , by the market at least , to be more than three times as valuable as a customer in Ulster or Border regions . |
18 | The sounds they produce in their larynx may reach as far up the ultrasonic scale as 200 000 hertz , allowing them to detect objects as tiny as a midget 20 metres away . |
19 | It had its Arcadian examples — like all revolutions it dug into antiquity for help and respectability and dynamic metaphors — and Mary could be seen , that morning , in woods as sun-speckled as a thrush 's throat , as a shepherdess from the Hellenic world , a Grace from their pagan earth-suckled legends , but above all a spirit of the place . |
20 | He was fanatical about his job and had even designed the most appropriate clothes for searching : white shorts and a sweat shirt , a plastic swimming cap , tight fitting to prevent the spilling of hairs , latex gloves as fine as a surgeon 's and rubber bathing shoes over his bare feet . |
21 | Once again I landed back in prison , the debtor 's hold in the Fleet ; a dirty , ramshackle place with narrow corridors , windows as thin as a miser 's lips , stinking with the refuse of the city . |
22 | Each tree had its fine strip of snow where the sun had not yet reached ; thin lines running vertically , white against the darkness of green-lichened bark ; lightning-conductor-like clues as effective as a compass : north-east was the direction they faced . |
23 | An outcrop of white rock from the steep hillside seemed to the children as tall as a cliff . |
24 | There are places roped with cablecoil guts as thick as a man , as fine as a whisker ; a rumbling kingdom . |
25 | For all that she was twenty-one , she had a hard job to smother giggles as hysterical as a schoolgirl 's . |
26 | A pile of wooden boxes as tall as a man stood on the quay . |
27 | Neither are the risks merely physical when she encourages a direct association between looking at her art and consuming food and drink , but the vast array of psychological dynamics which can motivate purchases as humble as a cup of coffee guarantees that the decision to choose one bar over another is often less casual than browsing through galleries . |
28 | There was a terrible wind blowing as well , sheeting across the plateau , piling the snow into drifts as high as a house . |
29 | Drifts as high as a house Jamie said . ’ |
30 | 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 . |