Example sentences of "ever [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Now this 21-year-old motor mechanic 's daughter looks stronger and better than ever off a four-handicap , and again showed what stern stuff she is made of with a thrilling tie-hole victory over Leinster international , Carol Wickham , at Royal Belfast .
2 Fischer Fine Art paid the highest price ever for a work by a living sculptor for this ( US$ 250,000 at Sotheby 's , New York in 1972 ) getting into the Guinness Book of Records , and selling the sculpture within a month .
3 Flags were lowered , tributes flooded in , memorial services were held , culminating in the first one ever for a cricketer at Westminster Abbey .
4 Rosehaugh 's results for 1989/90 revealed a pro-tax loss of £165 million , the largest deficit ever for a UK property enterprise .
5 Bantam Press , celebrating the achievement by Jilly Cooper 's The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous ( £14.99 ) of a subscription of 70,000 copies , the company 's highest ever for a hardback novel , is now looking forward to a further boost for the book when the CD and cassette single ‘ Lysander 's Theme ’ is released on 10th May .
6 Gulfstream has created what it claims is the most carefully conceived and designed flight deck and cabin interior ever for a business aircraft , based on extensive ergonomic , anthropomorphic and physiological research .
7 Not that he 'd ever for a moment think of … taking advantage , so to speak , of a young woman of loose morals like Mrs Heatherington-Scott . ’
8 The pomp of Parks , Thompson and Dexter must seem further away than ever for a club that has now failed to progress beyond the group stages in 12 of the 21 Benson & Hedges Cup .
9 As my hon. Friend the Member for Cynon Valley ( Mrs. Clwyd ) has pointed out , Britain 's overseas aid budget last year was not maintained but was the lowest ever as a percentage of this country 's gross domestic product .
10 In the States it would be preferable to do a set number of smaller theatre-type places , rather than slogging round for ever as a support band .
11 The use of continuing care beds for elderly people is being more closely scrutinised than ever as a result of the changing NHS culture .
12 Edinburgh University , they 'll take copies of them and keep them there for ever as a sort of reference museum .
13 She suddenly recollected that she was now the wife of the director of a large company , and drew herself up with what she hoped was some dignity ; but she only succeeded in looking more than ever like a pouter pigeon .
14 In the half-light of the editing suite his face appeared more than ever like a mask , the nose attenuated , the skin smooth and polished .
15 They turned and waited silently as Jackie Tiptoe 's distinctive shape , looking in the queer light more than ever like a gargoyle escaped from a cathedral , made its way across the grass with a swift , hiccupping run .
16 With her bouffant hair , her crimson lips , her plump raincoated figure hour-glassed by a tight belt , she looked more than ever like a matryoshka , a Russian doll .
17 Feeling more than ever like a cur , Neil turned the pages — but it was all of her that was left to him — and , he told himself firmly , he would read just enough to discover the truth about her … and why she had hoarded the cuttings .
18 He looked more than ever like a baby blackbird , rakish , half-strangled and very dear to me .
19 The grass seemed to flow on for ever like a millpond sea .
20 General Manager Rogerson added : ‘ We are running more trains than ever with a maximum of 26 per day in the height of our season .
21 He was ‘ a great Labour man ’ , a non-smoker and non-drinker , an elder of the kirk until the minister mistakenly , suggested he had a hangover — ‘ and it was the last time my grandfather was ever inside a church .
22 More patients are being treated in more specialities and with more up-to-date methods than ever before a reflection of the hard work and high levels of professionalism of the staff who serve the people of Darlington and Teesdale . ’
23 If the Liberal-SDP Alliance were ever in a position to implement electoral reform , a reformed and strengthened second chamber , and legal limits on the sovereignty of Parliament , then we could find ourselves with a constitution which entrenched the middle ground and which offered a democracy of dazzling choice but no decision , and a less-accountable government than that which we currently enjoy within the established constitution .
24 A large number of those jobs would be destroyed if the Labour party were ever in a position to put its policies into practice .
25 I wish to explore those proposals , lay bare the dangers which lurk beneath them and identify the threat not only to parliamentary representation from Scotland in this House but to the economic well-being of Scotland if the Labour party were ever in a position to exercise in Scotland the kind of powers that it would give to such an assembly .
26 It is also true to say that if the Opposition parties were ever in a position to put their policies into effect , that self-employment record would inevitably be gravely harmed and the cause of women in particular would suffer much more .
27 I am convinced that if the hon. Gentleman were ever in a position of responsibility in the House — the likelihood of which is becoming increasingly remote — he would also find himself advised that it would be foolish to put before the House proposals which in a few weeks or months might fall outside the law .
28 A conventional , water-cooled Garrett TB03 turbo helps generate more than 100bhp per litre — the highest specific output ever from a Chrysler production engine .
29 The journals remain cheap and popular , but demand is so great that they are bought mostly by subscription , hardly ever from a news stand .
30 ‘ I find the natives very useful in assisting being rarely ever without a tribe or a portion of a tribe with me when in their neighbourhood .
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